A watchdog group’s investigation has forced British billionaire Christopher Hohn to halt his massive financial pipeline to radical activist networks in America. The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF), chaired by Hohn and backed by his $60 billion hedge fund, poured over $553 million into U.S.-based organizations from 2014 to 2023, fueling campaigns that aimed to overhaul energy policies, promote divisive social programs, and even connect with Chinese government entities.
Americans for Public Trust (APT) laid bare the operation in a detailed report, revealing how CIFF’s money bankrolled groups pushing for extreme green initiatives, including lawsuits against fossil fuels and protests to eliminate traditional energy sources. One recipient, the Rocky Mountain Institute, received funds to advocate banning gas stoves—a move APT links to broader efforts undermining American households and industry.
“For far too long, Christopher Hohn, and other foreign billionaires like Hansjörg Wyss, have been able to exploit loopholes that allow foreign money to fund policy fights that shape American politics to fit their radical agendas. Hohn is only stopping his giving now that we caught him,” said APT Executive Director Caitlin Sutherland.
The report also uncovers CIFF’s troubling entanglements with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). As a registered NGO in China since 2017, CIFF has funneled millions to outfits directly tied to Beijing, such as the National Renewable Energy Center and Tsinghua University, which conducts military-related research. CIFF CEO Kate Hampton maintained close relations with CCP-linked “green” groups, raising questions about whether this funding served as a backdoor for foreign powers to sway U.S. policy. Could these connections explain the aggressive push against American energy independence, aligning suspiciously with China’s global ambitions?
Other beneficiaries included the New Venture Fund, which pocketed $1.1 million since 2016 to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts—programs often criticized for sowing division rather than unity. APT’s findings, drawn from tax records, annual reports, and legal documents, argue that such foreign cash injections violate laws against outsiders meddling in U.S. elections and demand immediate congressional reforms to seal these gaps.
In the wake of the exposure, CIFF announced it would cease grants to U.S. nonprofits, citing murky rules under the current administration. “Unfortunately, we are no longer confident in our understanding of the US policy environment for foreign funders of US NGOs, including for international work, which is our focus,” the foundation stated. Instead, it will reroute money to overseas entities, sparing only U.S.-based multilateral bodies.
This shift comes amid heightened scrutiny of foreign influence, especially as President Donald Trump’s policies tighten borders around political funding from abroad. Similar reports have spotlighted other billionaires’ operations, but Hohn’s case stands out for its scale and shadowy international ties. If unchecked, such schemes could erode national sovereignty, allowing outsiders to dictate domestic agendas from afar. The APT probe serves as a wake-up call: transparency isn’t optional when billions flow across borders to reshape society.


