On The Charlie Kirk Show, Glenn Beck and Ryan Mauro outlined findings they say tie George Soros’s Open Society Foundations to U.S. organizations accused of supporting extremist activity.
Mauro detailed the research he conducted with the Capitol Research Center, pointing to tens of millions of dollars in grants as evidence.
“According to George Soros own files from his Open Society Foundations,” Mauro said, “so myself, my colleagues at Capitol Research Center, basically went through as many grants of his as many funding streams as we could find.”
“And here’s the smoking guns that we believe that President Trump, if he’s informed of it, can use to go after Soros, network of hate in various ways,” Mauro continued.
“We traced over $80 million going from the Open Society Foundations to at least 54 groups engaged in crime and domestic terrorism on US soil or that are pro terrorism.”
He added, “They were endorsing things like the October 7 attacks, or are associated with foreign terrorist organizations or explicitly pro terror groups. And this is according to his own file, so it’s rock solid.”
Mauro said part of the funding was tied to groups that, in his words, meet the FBI’s definition of domestic terrorism.
“Overall, that amount over 23 million, went to at least seven groups that are doing things that meet the FBI definition of domestic terrorism, rioting and things like that,” he stated.
Beck pressed Mauro for more information. “Can you be more specific than this?” Beck asked.
Mauro responded by naming one of the organizations. “Absolutely, I’m happy to so the Center for third world organizing, for example, is an organization that has a hub that fuse together several really extreme organizations.”
“We found $400,000 going to them,” he said.
“And they openly boast of the fact that they threw down during the uprisings in Minnesota, obviously referring to the rioting and boasting of how many 1000s of people they helped train.”
Mauro explained that some of the groups create materials that appear innocent on the surface but contain links to violent guidance.
“A lot of these groups have created what they’ll call like a protest guide or an activism tool kit. And it sounds innocuous. Then you open it up, and you’ll see support for Hamas in it.”
He added, “But then they’ll sometimes slyly say, for more information, go to these hyperlinks, and you go to the hyperlinks, and there’ll be guides recommending things like property, destruction, violence, false IDs, how to obstruct justice, all of these things.”
“And they know darn well what they’re doing. They don’t put that there by accident,” Mauro said.
He continued, “Some of the more careful ones will just direct their readership to anarchist websites with all that material, knowing that they’ll see it when it’s there.”
Mauro also emphasized the broader reach of these groups.
“Some of these groups are coalitions,” he said.
“So when I say 54 groups, just one of those might have 300 entities in that one. So it’s actually the real number is actually much higher.”
The discussion centered on the scale of Soros’s reported funding and the potential implications if authorities confirm the links.

Mauro and Beck argued that the evidence warrants further investigation by federal officials, particularly in light of the groups’ own published materials.