MAINE — A highly coordinated network of over 500 activist groups organized nationwide “No Kings” protests across the United States over the weekend, featuring participation from communist and socialist organizations in Maine.
The protests occurred in multiple U.S. cities, including flagship events in St. Paul, Minnesota and revolution-themed rallies in Maine, all cohesive efforts led set forth by an organization titled Indivisible. Indivisible is a Democratic political advocacy organization that is funded by George Soros with links to the Open Society Foundations, with tertiary financing coming from other prominent left-wing elites distinguished by FOX news.
Ancillary involvement comes from liquidity nodes such as Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and profound communist based in China, who provides cash runway for inorganic activist movements like the People’s Forum, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition, CodePink, and the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.
[Related: 500 groups with $3B in revenues are behind the #NoKings protests and communist call for ‘revolution’]
Lively events over the weekend formed nationwide demonstrations against President Trump’s administration as organizers deployed the typical arsenal of manufactured signs, pro-socialist rhetoric, and unified blocs of leftist activism.
[Related: Omar Fateh Celebrates Latest Win In Blue-State Coalition Effort Restricting Federal Law Enforcement]
Large rallies were seen in New York, Washington D.C., Grand Rapids, Detroit, Denver, Minnesota, and Maine. In Maine, the Party for Socialism and Liberation emplaced a chapter of activists calling for supporters to assemble as a “Unified Leftist Contingent”, set up on a southwest corner of Montgomery Park in Portland. Their message was the atypical creative blend of bridging verbiage that attracts confused, angry young voters into aligning with pro-communist rhetoric as observed by The Maine Wire.
Despite the hipster Marxist vibes, the financial skeleton of the system is far more vast than a few senior citizens protesting before bingo night starts. The network pushing this weekend’s events includes revenues and funding from a network of over 500 groups, totaling approximately $3 billion dollars annually. Neville Roy Singham has funded and supported institutions that promote revolutionary socialist-based political ideology, which coincidentally appear to have become a political magnet for garnering young voter support in Maine.

In digesting the above information, a circulating activism message also states that activists should “get our revolutionary message in front of them and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people’s movement.”
Here in Maine, the same exact rhetoric and message was seen that emphasizes organization, disruption, and building power to overthrow existing systems.

The Pine Tree State rallies lined Route 1 near a local elementary school and in Portland’s Monument square, drawing crowds of signholders and not-so-child friendly live music inciting discourse. Political figures including Gov. Janet Mills and State Sen. Jill Duson were both present and active, engaging and smiling alongside activists promoting their revolutionary ideology.

[Related: Gateway Communities Implodes And Janet Mills Owns This Failure]
While attendees voiced their opposition to President Trump’s efforts to secure our nation from foreign criminals, conditions outside of the protest highlighted the consequences of progressive-left policy in Portland.
On Saturday near Monument Square, while young activists demonstrated; human beings were seen sleeping on sidewalks outside of shelters, scattered trash and debris litter fields of view, and people persistently observed begging for money at traffic lights.
Remarkably, the activists’ peripheral vision remained laser-focused on the Soros-funded mission, despite human misery and suffering visible from their organized protest site.
[Related: Portland Mayor Warns City Is Running Out Of Runway As Homelessness Crisis Deepens]
While standing politicians and organizers present at the Maine events continued their scrutiny of anything remotely related to President Trump, the homeless crisis remained on full display and public disorder remained unaddressed.
[Related: Decomposed Human Remains Found Outside Portland Homeless Center]
Jon Fetherston of The Maine Wire noted that participants, including high-profile state leaders, appeared more engaged in virtue signaling and protest optics rather than tackling the visible consequences of policy failure nearby. Even so as to Jon Fetherston asked State Sen. Jill Duson about her son, Nathan Davis, involvement in the Gateway Community Services scandal; the cat got her tongue and comments became unavailable. Still, she stood in support as an “Auntie Against Fascism”.

The “No Kings” demonstrations act as framed resistance efforts that operate within a structure of deep funding networks and radical leftist organizations. The target of these movements are vulnerable, emotional voter groups, often present in rural blue-states.
As protests conclude, the documented scaling of financial backing and explicit communist rhetoric surfacing underscores the coordinated nature of the movement.
Right on cue, the public discourse occurring nationwide is also being encouraged and attended in stride by Maine’s elected officials, despite the progressive-policy induced dumpster fire surrounding them.
“The goal of socialism is communism.” – Vladimir Lenin



