SPLC saw revenue surge after Charlottesville rally as DOJ alleges informant ties
The SPLC's revenue reportedly surged from $51M to $133M in the year following the 2017 Charlottesville rally
By Charles Creitz Fox News
Published April 23, 2026 6:00am EDT | Updated April 23, 2026 8:33am EDT
The Southern Poverty Law Center more than doubled its revenue in the months following the deadly 2017 Charlottesville "Unite the Right" rally — a surge now drawing renewed scrutiny after a Department of Justice indictment alleged the group paid an informant tied to the event’s organizers.
The 2017 rally, which left one woman dead, became a cultural flashpoint over White nationalism and political violence, driving widespread condemnation and a surge in donations to civil rights groups, including the SPLC. The fallout also shaped the 2020 presidential election, as President Donald Trump’s response — including his remarks about "very fine people" on both sides — was hammered by the left, with former President Joe Biden later citing Charlottesville as a reason he entered the race.
"For years, the Left used the 'Jews will not replace us' 2017 Unite the Right rally as proof of rampant antisemitism on the Right. Turns out, it was underwritten by the Leftist SPLC, which allegedly funded organizers, supervised racist posts, and coordinated transportation. Wild," journalist Batya Ungar-Sargon wrote on X, one of many conservatives who argue the allegations raise questions about whether the SPLC’s use of paid informants may have played a role in amplifying or facilitating extremist activity.
According to the indictment from the Department of Justice, the SPLC paid an informant network dating back to the 1980s, including a "covert network" that was associated with or infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan and other groups at the organization’s direction.
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