A FOX NEWS INVESTIGATION IGNITES FURY ON CAPITOL HILL
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The corridors of power buzzed with tension this week after Fox News Digital published an explosive investigative report titled “The Mamdani Machine,” uncovering a $2.5 million network allegedly backed by George Soros and Islamist-linked activists in support of New York State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, a self-proclaimed democratic socialist.
The investigation alleges that Mamdani’s rise was not a grassroots miracle but rather the result of a carefully orchestrated funding network designed to push far-left ideology into the mainstream of American politics.
And no one responded more sharply than Senator John Kennedy (R–LA) — who, in a fiery television appearance, called the revelations “a blueprint for subversion disguised as social justice.”
“If this report is true,” Kennedy said, “then we’re not talking about a campaign — we’re talking about a machine. And that machine isn’t building democracy; it’s dismantling it, one election at a time.”
THE MAMDANI NETWORK: HOW IT ALLEGEDLY OPERATES
According to the Fox News investigation, the so-called “Mamdani Machine” involves multiple nonprofit organizations, advocacy groups, and political action committees linked by overlapping personnel, funding trails, and ideological alignment.
The network allegedly receives donations from foundations associated with George Soros, and includes activists with ties to pro-Palestinian lobbying groups and radical Islamic advocacy circles.
Public records reportedly show large sums of money flowing into “community empowerment” projects in New York City, many of which later provided logistical or financial support to Mamdani’s campaign.
Fox News described the structure as “a sophisticated funnel that turns ideology into influence.”
“They’ve built a political conveyor belt,” one former campaign staffer told the outlet. “The money starts in activist organizations, gets laundered through nonprofits, and ends up fueling socialist candidates who promise to ‘reimagine America.’”
KENNEDY’S BLISTERING REBUKE
Senator Kennedy wasted no time responding. In his signature Southern drawl — calm, cutting, and unmistakably blunt — he went straight for the jugular.
“This isn’t activism,” he said on The Ingraham Angle. “This is engineering. It’s political engineering with a purpose — to rewrite America’s moral software. And the worst part is, they’re using tax-exempt organizations to do it.”
Kennedy accused Soros and his affiliates of weaponizing philanthropy to infiltrate the Democratic Party’s left wing, calling it “a Trojan horse for socialism wrapped in charity.”
“You can call it progressive, you can call it compassionate, you can even call it woke,” he continued. “But at the end of the day, it’s the same old con — foreign money, radical ideology, and an appetite for control.”
His remarks, while hyperbolic to some, resonated deeply with conservative voters who have long accused global donors of manipulating local elections.
WHO IS ZOHRAN MAMDANI?
Zohran Mamdani, born in Uganda to Indian parents and raised in New York, has branded himself as part of the new generation of progressive Democrats. A member of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), he’s known for his outspoken criticism of capitalism, support for Palestinian causes, and calls to “defund the police.”
Fox News reported that Mamdani’s campaign received “indirect financial assistance” from multiple nonprofit entities sharing ideological alignment with the DSA and other far-left groups.
Mamdani has dismissed such claims as “right-wing fearmongering,” saying his movement is “powered by ordinary people, not billionaires.”
But Senator Kennedy wasn’t convinced.
“If this is ordinary,” he said, “then God help extraordinary. When billionaires and foreign-backed networks are ‘helping’ local elections, that’s not democracy — that’s design.”
A WARNING FOR THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY

Kennedy’s remarks come at a time when the Democratic Party is facing increasing tension between its centrist establishment and its insurgent socialist faction. Many moderate Democrats have privately expressed concern that figures like Mamdani, backed by well-funded activist ecosystems, could pull the party too far left — alienating swing voters and jeopardizing national races.
“This is the monster they created,” Kennedy said. “They spent years flirting with radicals for votes, and now the radicals are running the show. You can’t open Pandora’s box and act surprised when the demons start campaigning.”
Political analysts note that Kennedy’s words, while incendiary, tap into growing unease within Washington over the influence of global philanthropy in domestic politics.
One strategist, speaking anonymously, said, “The fear isn’t just about Mamdani — it’s about the model. If a few million dollars can buy ideological real estate in New York, what’s stopping others from replicating it nationwide?”
KENNEDY’S CALL FOR OVERSIGHT
In the same interview, Kennedy urged congressional oversight of foreign-linked nonprofits operating within the U.S. political sphere.
“We’ve got laws against foreign interference, but apparently, if you write a big enough check to a nonprofit, those laws take the day off,” he said. “We need hearings. We need transparency. And we need to stop pretending that influence only comes from Moscow or Beijing.”
His call for investigation has already gained traction among several Republican lawmakers, with whispers of potential hearings being discussed behind closed doors.
A senior GOP aide told reporters, “Kennedy’s comments lit the fuse. The party wants to dig deeper — and fast.”
DEMOCRATIC RESPONSE: “CONSPIRACY POLITICS”

Democratic leaders were quick to denounce the Fox report and Kennedy’s reaction, calling it “baseless fearmongering designed to discredit grassroots politics.”
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a fellow DSA member, fired back on social media:
“Fox News and John Kennedy are terrified of young, diverse candidates who actually represent working people. That’s what this is really about.”
Mamdani himself issued a brief statement dismissing the accusations as “manufactured outrage from a senator who confuses compassion with communism.”
But Kennedy doubled down.
“You can call it compassion all day,” he said, “but if your compassion comes with a price tag and a foreign checkbook, it’s not kindness — it’s corruption.”
A DEEPER STRUGGLE OVER AMERICA’S FUTURE
Beyond the partisan clash, Kennedy’s outburst reflects a broader anxiety about the direction of American politics — where money, ideology, and influence intersect in increasingly complex ways.
For critics like Kennedy, the “Mamdani Machine” is not just a scandal but a symptom: proof that democracy can be reshaped quietly, not through coups or campaigns, but through networks, narratives, and nonprofits.
“They don’t need to overthrow anything,” Kennedy said. “They just need to buy it, one district at a time.”
As the story continues to unfold, both Fox News and congressional investigators are reportedly preparing follow-up reports tracing additional funding links between Soros-backed organizations and socialist-aligned candidates across several states.
CONCLUSION
In an era of political polarization, Kennedy’s warning lands like a shot across the bow — part outrage, part prophecy. His critics dismiss him as dramatic; his supporters hail him as a truth-teller cutting through the noise.
But as questions mount about money, influence, and ideology, one thing remains certain: this controversy isn’t fading anytime soon.
Whether the “Mamdani Machine” proves to be conspiracy or reality, the storm it unleashed has already reshaped the conversation — not just about one candidate, but about who truly holds power in American democracy.
As Kennedy put it in his closing line:
“You can call it progress. You can call it politics. But let’s call it what it is — a $2.5 million experiment in how to buy a revolution.”