A joint investigation by the Discovery Institute and Capital Research Center reveals taxpayer-funded pathways supporting far-left extremism.
The 176-page report, titled "Infiltrated," alleges that left-wing movements are leveraging established nonprofit structures and grant channels to push political and social agendas that include defunding police, promoting disruptive protest tactics, and destabilizing confidence in civic institutions.
Researchers describe “interlocking networks” of advocacy groups and donors as the mechanism through which radical actors access funding and institutional resources while maintaining plausible deniability.
A key chapter of Infiltrated is devoted to Antifa, which the authors characterize as a decentralized but coordinated movement operating through local cells and strategic alliances. The report claims these networks extend their influence beyond street activism and into public policy by embedding in larger coalitions and nonprofits.
According to the report, Antifa-aligned groups have used fiscal sponsorships, arrangements that permit unincorporated or smaller activist groups to receive tax-deductible funds via established nonprofits, to funnel money without direct exposure to donors. The authors argue this model allows radical groups to benefit from institutional cover while masking their direct involvement.
The report further contends that media and messaging campaigns portray Antifa as defenders against fascism or white supremacy, thereby laundering the legitimacy of more confrontational tactics. It suggests a normalization process wherein protest escalation, property disruption, and civil disobedience enter broader movements’ playbooks.
Infiltrated also addresses other activist domains, climate justice, racial equity, and electoral reform, claiming that shared infrastructure (donor networks, communications hubs, legal advocacy arms) undergirds coordination across issue areas. The authors argue that some mainstream philanthropic institutions have, inadvertently or otherwise, funded or enabled more radical efforts.
Some critics dispute the report’s methodology, arguing that it equates proximity or overlap with organizational control. They note the decentralized nature of Antifa and warn that connecting mainstream nonprofits to radical action can misstate causation. Conversely, proponents say the report spotlights a blurred boundary between lawful activism and covert radical influence.
In a joint statement, the Capital Research Center and Discovery Institute said the Infiltrated project is part of a sustained effort to trace how ideologies may seep into public life via civil society institutions.
The timing of Infiltrated’s release coincides with heightened executive attention to Antifa. This week, President Donald Trump convened a White House roundtable with independent journalists who cover Antifa-related unrest.
One speaker was Jonathan Choe, a Discovery Institute senior fellow and journalist for Turning Point USA’s Frontlines who, during the event, accused what he termed the “homeless industrial complex” of concealing and funding Antifa activity with public money. He argued that activist organizations focused on homeless encampments engage in public relations operations designed to embarrass law enforcement, and, he claimed, quietly enlist Antifa militants to amplify the effect.
“In many cases, the homeless industrial complex is running cover for Antifa, and Antifa is benefiting from American tax dollars, and they’re essentially being used as the muscle,” Choe said. He went on to assert that some groups “quietly … are bringing in Antifa militants to manufacture a crisis to make the police look bad.”
He warned of a “deeply embedded connection” between homelessness nonprofits, far-left activists, and Antifa. Choe’s remarks were documented in contemporaneous reporting from the event. President Trump praised the participant journalists and reiterated his intention to designate Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization, citing ongoing inquiries into its funding and coordination.
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