SUWA board member Hansjorg Wyss exposed as primary funder of Antifa terror network

*Featured image by Andy Ngo

Antifa Bombshell: Trump Exposes Swiss Billionaire Environmentalist as Antifa’s Shadow Funder

Wikipedia image

~Editor

In an October 8th White House roundtable that crackled with revelations, President Donald J. Trump exposed Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss as a major funder of violent radical groups throughout the country.

Wyss is best known for his environmental activism but has reportedly bankrolled Antifa’s violent activities since 2017. Flanked by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Attorney General Pam Bondi, and journalists who have been victims of Antifa violence, Trump will likely use the disclosures in his crusade against domestic terrorism. 

Terror Funding

The session, broadcast live, followed Trump’s September executive order designating Antifa a domestic terrorist organization. Witnesses, including Portland-based reporter Andy Ngo—whose 2019 assault by masked Antifa thugs left him hospitalized—recounted brutal ambushes, from firebombs in Seattle to flag-burnings in Chicago. But the bombshell dropped when Trump named Wyss as a primary funder of numerous radical movements. At 89, Wyss—net worth $5.1 billion, per Forbes.

Born in Bern, Switzerland, he built his empire through Synthes, a medical device giant sold to Johnson & Johnson in 2012 for $19.7 billion. Yet beneath the philanthropy lies a web of “dark money,” critics say, funneled through the Wyss Foundation and Berger Action Fund. Since 2016, these vehicles have pumped $339 million into left-leaning nonprofits, per Associated Press analysis, with $245 million alone to Arabella Advisors’ behemoths: the Sixteen Thirty Fund and New Venture Fund.

A 2021 Americans for Public Trust (APT) FEC complaint accuses Wyss of skirting foreign-donor bans, routing cash to groups like Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA), which Sen. Josh Hawley linked to 2021 “unlawful” riots. Taxpayer grants amplified it: CHIRLA pocketed $50 million federally since 2021, partnering with Soros- and Wyss-backed outfits. Since 2017, this network has ignited uprisings from Charlottesville clashes to Kenosha infernos, with Antifa’s decentralized fury—per Reuters—shielded by Wyss’s opaque nonprofits.

Wyss’s Connections to Environmental Groups

Wyss’s tentacles extend to eco-extremism, fueling Trump’s charge of a “radical green machine.” The Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA) has benefited greatly from Wyss’ millions in donations. SUWA’s environmental activism extends into local politics by funding campaigns throughout Utah. It’s spin-off organization, Rural Utah Project activities are focused on overturning Utah’s rural counties by electing Democrats to office.

A member of the board of SUWA , Wyss has poured millions into its efforts to lock up 9 million acres of Utah’s public lands as “wilderness.” Since the late 1970s SUWA has waged war on Utah’s rural counties by opposing the development of natural resources, litigating multiple uses from livestock grazing to mining and motorized outdoor recreation. His $125 million Harvard gift birthed the Wyss Institute, but his eco-war chest—$807 million since 2016—arms SUWA and its allies including The Wilderness Society and Grand Canyon Trust. 

Flawed Medical Products

Wyss’s history includes the dark episode with his medical product company, Synthes. In 2011, the firm pleaded guilty to felony off-label promotion of Norian SRS bone cement, a vertebral product untested for high-risk spine surgeries. Despite internal warnings—Wyss pushed the flawed product which, according to the FDA, caused 13 patient deaths from pulmonary embolisms, tissue necrosis and infections.

Fines levied against Synthes topped $25 million and some executives, including Wyss loyalists, drew prison stints. “He gambled lives for profits,” Trump fumed, echoing a 2021 APT report branding Wyss’s leadership “the 800-pound gorilla” of corporate malfeasance.

Sexual Harassment History

Recent scandals compound the toll: A May 2025 lawsuit accuses Wyss of serial sexual harassment at his Halter Ranch winery, targeting a 30-something employee 60 years his junior with unwanted advances and retaliation, per National Review. The suit details a “hostile” workplace, forcing medical leave for anxiety. Wyss denies it, but whispers of leverage—threatening rehab funds for a lover’s daughter—haunt his Wyoming ranch.

 



 

About the author