Tech entrepreneur Neville Roy Singham has been identified as a central figure funding a global network of far-left activist organizations, according to a Fox News Digital investigation. The network is estimated to include about 2,000 groups promoting anti-U.S. propaganda aligned with autocratic regimes in China, Russia, Iran, Cuba, North Korea, Venezuela, and Gaza.
Singham’s Network Mobilizes Global Protests
The investigation uncovered how Singham, who sold his tech company Thoughtworks in 2017, has since redirected resources toward activist work. Key figures in the network include activist Jodie Evans, whom Singham married in a politically themed ceremony in Jamaica, and Marxist academic Vijay Prashad. Both have been involved in organizing protests and campaigns across the globe.
Photos from Singham and Evans’s 2017 wedding show prominent activists and celebrities such as actor Danny Glover and CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin, who continue to appear in protests and advocacy events associated with the network. Recent footage shows Benjamin and Evans participating in anti-U.S. demonstrations in Cuba.
Financial Flows and Ideological Strategy
Fox News Digital analyzed 223 financial transactions totaling $591 million between 2017 and 2025. The funds flowed through multiple organizational layers, described as “five concentric rings” of an ideological pipeline supporting movements that seek to undermine U.S. influence globally. This structure reportedly draws on Mao Zedong’s doctrine of mobilizing “The Masses” to sustain a People’s War framework.
In November 2025, Singham and Prashad appeared together at the Global South Academic Forum in Shanghai, China, where they expressed support for the Chinese Communist Party and criticized Western governments. The event was co-sponsored by Chinese academic institutions with official ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
Ongoing Impact and Public Response
The network’s supporters operate through nonprofits, media platforms, and activist centers advocating for the dismantling of what they term “the U.S. empire.” Fox News’s requests for comment from Singham, Evans, and other principal figures were not returned. Activist insiders describe the network’s approach as “revolutionary tourism,” linking international activism to coordinated political agitation funded by large, opaque money flows.
For more stories on this topic, visit our category page.


















