

In recent years,millionsof foreign dollars have quietly poured into the United States to fund radical left-wing climate and social justice groups.
At the center of this network is British hedge fund billionaire Chris Hohn, whose$60 billionfortune powers the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF).
With a$6 billionendowment, CIFF has funneled more than$553 millionsince 2014 into U.S. nonprofits and advocacy organizations dedicated to dismantling fossil fuels, pushing diversity and equity initiatives, and advancing extreme climate policies that undermine American energy independence.
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Foreign nationals are barred from contributing to American political candidates and parties.
Yet through nonprofit grants and advocacy networks, Hohn has found a way to shape U.S. policy debates and advance a progressive agenda.
The reach of these efforts extends far beyond domestic politics. CIFF’s leadership has cultivated alarmingtiesto the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), raising concerns that American activism may be used—intentionally or not—to advance Beijing’s interests.
CIFF CEOKate Hamptonillustrates the problem.
She has spent years cultivatingrelationshipswith CCP-linked entities, serving on the China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development (CCICED), a body directly overseen by senior Chinese officials.
In 2023, shehelpedorganize CCICED’s annual meeting, working alongside top members of China’s State Council. By 2024, Hampton was not only a featured keynote speaker but also arecipientof the “Friendship Award,” Beijing’s highest honor for foreign experts.
She has alsoservedon initiativestiedto China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which leverages environmental and infrastructure projects to expand Chinese influence globally.
These relationships cannot be dismissed as mere networking.
When the head of one of the world’s largest climate foundations is honored by the CCP and collaborates with agencies that shape Beijing’s global agenda, questions must be asked.
Are American nonprofits,fundedby Hohn’s billions, serving as echo chambers for Chinese policy goals?
Theoverlapbetween radical climate activism and CCP priorities—such as weakening U.S. fossil fuel production while expanding China’s own industrial leverage—makes the risk clear.
Even members of Congress have taken notice. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) recentlychaireda subcommittee hearing examining how foreign-funded groups with CCP ties may be influencing U.S. climate policy and undermining national security.
The concern is not only about foreign money but also about the convergence of agendas: Beijing benefits directly when American groups push policies that destroy domestic energy production and expand reliance on Chinese supply chains for renewable technology.
With billions of dollars at stake and direct CCP connections on the record, Congress must investigate whether Hohn’s CIFF and its U.S. partners are compromising America’s independence under the disguise of “green” advocacy.
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