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Originally published on www.sayerji.substack.com
As Ahmed faces a January 5 deportation hearing in the Southern District of New York, this investigation examines the deeper record and legal stakes absent from mainstream coverage.
Read and share the X post dedicated to this article here.
Executive Summary
- Imran Ahmed, co-founder (with Morgan McSweeney) and CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), is challenging U.S. government action that could result in his deportation, arguing that he is being punished for constitutionally protected speech and advocacy.
- An extensively documented record--including Paul Holden's new book The Fraud, Al Jazeera's explosive Labour Files, leaked internal CCDH planning documents, and Ahmed's own public statements--portrays a far more complex picture: one of a political operative whose work consistently blends advocacy with coordinated pressure campaigns.
- A leaked "portfolio planning" memo, cited by U.S. officials, uses explicit operational language such as "Kill Musk's Twitter," "Trigger EU & UK regulatory action," and "black ops"* targeting U.S. political figures--language that closely aligns with the State Department's stated concern over "extraterritorial censorship of Americans."
- The case now before the Southern District of New York, governed by a Temporary Restraining Order entered on December 29, 2025, sets the stage for a January 5, 2026 hearing that may determine whether this dispute remains a narrow immigration fight--or becomes a wider reckoning over foreign influence, funding networks, and cross-border narrative warfare.
Disclosure
The author was among those named in CCDH's 2021 "Disinformation Dozen" report and remains a party to ongoing federal civil rights litigation concerning the events and actors discussed herein. This investigation draws on that direct experience, including documented instances where CCDH-generated designations were operationalized in foreign legal proceedings against the author. Readers should weigh this perspective accordingly--both as a potential source of bias and as a basis for firsthand knowledge that external observers cannot possess.
Part I -- Origins: Labour Party Factional Warfare as a Training Ground
A political operator before a "civil society" leader
Long before CCDH became a fixture in American media and congressional debates, Imran Ahmed operated within the internal machinery of the UK Labour Party during one of the most volatile periods in its modern history.
Paul Holden's The Fraud documents Ahmed as a Labour Party strategist and spin-doctor, closely aligned with figures such as Morgan McSweeney and Steve Reed MP, and openly hostile to the Corbyn movement (the grassroots, left-wing faction that rose to prominence under Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn). Holden places Ahmed within a network that treated internal party conflict not as democratic disagreement, but as a strategic communications war--one involving message discipline, media seeding, and procedural maneuvering rather than open debate.

In a piece written for the Canary, Holden details a formative episode during Ahmed's time working for Labour MP Angela Eagle: the so-called "Brickgate" affair. In 2016, Eagle's office publicly claimed that her constituency office window had been smashed with a brick by hostile Corbyn supporters following her leadership challenge. Ahmed, acting on Eagle's behalf, issued statements amplifying the allegation, which was widely reported as evidence of left-wing intimidation. Subsequent investigations by independent journalists and bloggers found no evidence that a brick had been used, no proof the incident was politically motivated, and no corroboration for related claims that events were cancelled due to threats. Despite these findings, the episode hardened into a durable media narrative portraying Corbyn's supporters as abusive and dangerous--a pattern Holden identifies as an early example of how contested or unsubstantiated claims were leveraged to delegitimize political opponents and justify extraordinary institutional responses.

A recurring theme in Holden's account is secrecy as method. He describes the Labour Together Project, a shadowy entity operating alongside official party structures, with undisclosed funding and a tightly controlled workspace known colloquially as "Room 216." According to Holden, only a small circle of trusted operatives--including Ahmed--had access. This culture of compartmentalization would later reappear in CCDH's structure and operations.
Undeclared Funding and Rule-Breaking as Infrastructure
Holden's account goes further, arguing that the Labour Together operation was not merely secretive but financially structured in ways that evaded normal transparency--including allegations of improper or unlawful political contributions that helped fuel the factional project. In Holden's telling, this funding opacity mattered because Labour Together functioned as more than a think tank: it operated as a political vehicle that influenced internal party outcomes while limiting external visibility into who was paying for the project and why.
Holden and related reporting identify Morgan McSweeney as central to this effort, alleging that the operation benefited from contributions that were not properly declared under Labour's own rules and, potentially, under UK political finance requirements. If substantiated, such irregularities would not be mere technicalities. They would demonstrate a willingness to substitute covert financing and insider infrastructure for democratic accountability--the same pattern of operating "outside the frame" that later appears, critics argue, in CCDH's donor opacity and pressure-campaign model.
Placed alongside Brickgate and the "Room 216" culture, these alleged funding violations complete the picture of a factional project built on three reinforcing pillars: narrative escalation, institutional leverage, and financial opacity--a template that would later be repurposed in the language of online "harm" and "misinformation."
The Labour Files context: factionalism and institutional manipulation
Al Jazeera's The Labour Files provides critical context for understanding the political culture from which Imran Ahmed emerged--and the methods that later reappear, in altered form, in his work with CCDH.

Drawing on thousands of leaked internal documents, emails, and interviews with former Labour officials, the investigative series depicts a party apparatus consumed by factional conflict, in which senior staff and aligned operatives discussed and, in some cases, implemented strategies that went well beyond ordinary political disagreement. The series documents allegations of member monitoring, selective or delayed enforcement of disciplinary rules, and strategic briefing of journalists to shape public narratives about internal dissent.¹
Central to The Labour Files is the contention that allegations of abuse, antisemitism, and extremism--some real, others contested--were frequently escalated through institutional channels in ways that served factional objectives, often insulating those claims from internal challenge while amplifying their public impact. The result, according to the series, was not merely reputational damage to individual members, but a structural environment in which narrative control functioned as a tool of governance.
While The Labour Files does not focus exclusively on Ahmed, Paul Holden's The Fraud explicitly situates him within this same ecosystem. Holden places Ahmed alongside senior figures and operatives who, he argues, helped normalize a style of politics in which contested allegations were rapidly converted into authoritative narratives, then leveraged to justify extraordinary institutional responses--suspensions, closures of local party units, media campaigns, and the sidelining of internal opponents.²
This pattern--allegation -> amplification -> institutional action -> insulation from review--is particularly salient to the present case. It establishes a methodological continuity between Labour-era factional operations and later NGO-led "misinformation" campaigns: both rely less on adjudicating truth claims than on mobilizing institutions to act first, while debate is deferred or foreclosed.
For the purposes of Ahmed v. Rubio, this background is not offered to prove criminal wrongdoing. The State Department's legal theory does not require that showing. It requires plausibility: that Ahmed is not merely a neutral researcher whose work accidentally provoked controversy, but a trained political operator whose later activities plausibly reflect a learned and repeated approach to power--one in which narrative escalation, institutional leverage, and reputational designation are primary tools.
Seen through that lens, The Labour Files does not function as character assassination or partisan critique. It functions as pattern evidence--evidence that the practices now under scrutiny in a U.S. foreign-policy and immigration context did not arise in isolation, but were refined over years inside one of Europe's most consequential political institutions.
PART II -- OPERATIONS: From "Research" to Coordinated Pressure Campaigns
Stop Funding Fake News: economic coercion as speech control
Holden devotes significant attention to Stop Funding Fake News (SFFN), a campaign closely tied to Ahmed and CCDH. He describes it as an astroturf operation--one that presented itself as grassroots activism while concealing its leadership and institutional backing.
SFFN's core tactic was not persuasion but economic pressure: contacting advertisers, payment processors, and platforms to cut off revenue to targeted media outlets. Holden records Ahmed later boasting--at a U.S. State Department conference--that this model could "completely eviscerate the economic base of a website," citing outlets that had been effectively destroyed.
This admission becomes crucial in light of Ahmed's current claim that he is being punished merely for speech. The historical record shows him openly celebrating speech suppression by proxy, achieved through financial and institutional leverage rather than direct bans.
The Disinformation Dozen: from report to political cudgel
CCDH's most influential publication, The Disinformation Dozen (March 2021), alleged that twelve individuals were responsible for nearly two-thirds of anti-vaccine content circulating on major social media platforms. The report named several Americans, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services.

The report was uncritically yet rapidly amplified by the White House and the global media, and cited by social media platforms to justify enforcement actions. However, Meta publicly rebutted CCDH's central quantitative claim, stating that the report overstated reach by approximately 1,300-fold, and that the named accounts accounted for only a tiny fraction of vaccine-related views on its platforms.
Despite this rebuttal, the report continued to function as a designation tool--a reputational marker that followed its targets across platforms, media coverage, and government hearings, long after its methodology had been challenged.
Notably, Ahmed reintroduces the same disputed framework in his own federal lawsuit, recounting the Disinformation Dozen narrative as part of CCDH's public-interest work and as contextual justification for the government's alleged retaliation. In doing so, the complaint recycles allegations that had already been formally contested by the platforms themselves, and are the subject of ongoing federal civil rights litigation against Ahmed in Florida, effectively re-attaching stigmatizing labels to the same named individuals in a new and authoritative forum.
For those previously designated, this repetition constitutes a form of re-injury: allegations that were never adjudicated, later formally rebutted, and yet continue to resurface--now embedded in a federal pleading. The irony is striking. At the very moment Ahmed invokes the First Amendment to claim injury to his own rights, he reintroduces contested allegations that once again attach stigma to the same twelve Americans, none of whom are parties to the case and none of whom are afforded an opportunity to respond. What is asserted as protected speech on one side thus functions, in practice, as renewed reputational harm on the other.
That asymmetry, critics argue, lies at the heart of the dispute now before the court. It illustrates how contested NGO narratives--once elevated, amplified, and insulated from challenge--can persist and propagate independently of adjudication, shaping institutional behavior long after their factual basis has been questioned. In the present litigation, U.S. officials cite the Disinformation Dozen episode not as a validated finding, but as part of the broader factual backdrop informing a foreign-policy determination--underscoring how a disputed report, despite formal rebuttal, has nonetheless acquired a durable role in state decision-making. In that sense, the complaint does not merely describe the dynamic under scrutiny; it re-enacts it, revealing how designation, repetition, and institutional uptake can continue to operate even as their author seeks constitutional shelter from the consequences.
Parliament as Amplifier and Shield
Ahmed did not merely publish CCDH's claims; he reintroduced and elevated them within the UK Parliament, a setting where parliamentary privilege provides near-absolute insulation from defamation liability. In oral and written testimony, contested CCDH narratives--most notably those arising from The Disinformation Dozen--were reiterated in a forum that confers institutional authority while foreclosing meaningful rebuttal.
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Critics point to the specific language used in parliamentary settings, where individuals named or implied by CCDH reports were associated with criminality and predatory harm, including rhetoric likening "disinformation networks" to organized crime rings and, in some cases, invoking analogies to child grooming and exploitation. These were not judicial findings or evidentiary determinations, but rhetorical constructions deployed under the protection of parliamentary privilege, where those targeted had no opportunity to respond, contest evidence, or seek redress.
Once voiced in Parliament, such characterizations acquired a quasi-official status. Parliamentary records are routinely treated by journalists, regulators, platforms, and foreign authorities as authoritative sources. As a result, criminal-adjacent labels--introduced without adjudication--were laundered into the legislative record, where they could be cited, repeated, and operationalized far beyond the original context.
The consequences of this elevation are not abstract. Parliamentary repetition transforms NGO allegations into durable governance artifacts, capable of shaping enforcement decisions, content moderation policies, and even overseas legal actions. What begins as a contested advocacy report thus becomes a legitimized reference point--one that can justify institutional responses while remaining insulated from direct challenge.
This dynamic--NGO allegation -> parliamentary amplification -> institutional uptake -> cross-border consequence--lies at the center of the State Department's concern about extraterritorial censorship. It is also examined in detail in a source-driven investigation documenting how parliamentary privilege, rather than merely protecting free speech, can function as a force multiplier for reputational and procedural harm.
PART III -- THE LEAKED MEMOL When Intent Is Written Down
"Kill Musk's Twitter": the document that changed the case
The most consequential document in the public record is a leaked portfolio-planning meeting memo,* portions of which are cited by U.S. officials and referenced in Ahmed's own filings.
The memo contains explicit priority language, including:
- "Kill Musk's Twitter"
- "Trigger EU & UK regulatory action"
- A line attributed to "IA": "RFK -- black ops being set up to look at RFK. Nervousness about the impact of him on the election."
This language matters because it mirrors--almost verbatim--the phrasing cited by Under Secretary of State Sarah B. Rogers in public statements announcing sanctions against what she called a "censorship-NGO ecosystem."
In his complaint, Ahmed characterizes these references as distorted or taken out of context. But from a legal and journalistic standpoint, the memo supplies what the government needs most: evidence of intent. It portrays CCDH not as a passive research body, but as an organization planning coordinated, outcome-driven campaigns aimed at platforms, regulators, and political actors.
PART IV -- MIAMI, FUNDING, AND CROSS-BORDER CONSEQUENCES
Why Miami matters
CCDH is often described as a UK-based NGO, but its financial and reputational anchoring in the United States tells a different story.
Investigative reporting shows that Miami-based philanthropic entities provided funding to CCDH's U.S. operations. Ahmed was also publicly celebrated through the Elevate Prize, bringing both money and elite validation at a moment when CCDH's internal documents revealed aggressive political targeting.
Miami thus functions as both a jurisdictional foothold and a legitimization hub, placing CCDH squarely within U.S. civic and legal space.
Sayer Ji · November 23, 2025
Read, share and comment on the X post dedicated to this article here: https://x.com/sayerjigmi/status/1992704882969575682?s=46
Documented overseas operationalization
My public statement posted to Substack and X on Dec. 29th, 2025 provides a concrete case study of how CCDH narratives traveled across borders. In it I document how CCDH's "Disinformation Dozen" designation--later reiterated by Ahmed in Parliament--was subsequently cited in a foreign criminal proceeding, supporting an ex parte arrest application, despite no charges or notice.
This is not merely reputational harm; it is procedural harm, illustrating how NGO-generated narratives can be operationalized within legal systems abroad. For U.S. officials, this kind of downstream consequence strengthens the argument that CCDH's work constitutes extraterritorial censorship, not protected domestic advocacy.
Sayer Ji · December 29, 2025
Placed on the public record on 12/29/25
PART V -- THE LEGAL COLLISION: Deportation, Leniency, and the Question of Exposure
Deportation as remedy--or off-ramp?
Ahmed frames deportation as an extreme and punitive measure. Critics counter that, given the scope of alleged activities (including violations of FARA), deportation may be the least intrusive response available--one that avoids deeper scrutiny into funding networks, coordination with government actors, and potential legal violations.
This framing flips the moral polarity of the case. Instead of asking whether Ahmed deserves protection, it asks whether the public deserves transparency.
The Temporary Restraining Order and its significance
On December 29, 2025, the Southern District of New York entered a Temporary Restraining Order prohibiting the government from arresting, detaining, or transferring Ahmed pending further court order. The court also required advance notice of any alternative basis for detention and waived the bond requirement.
The TRO signals that the court found imminent risk and serious constitutional questions--but it is not a ruling on the merits.
WHAT COMES NEXT
The January 5, 2026 Hearing and Beyond
The January 5 hearing in NYC at 500 Pearl Street will likely address:
- Venue and jurisdiction -- whether SDNY is the proper forum and how long Ahmed intends to remain in New York.
- Scope of the TRO -- whether it should be extended, narrowed, or dissolved.
- Briefing schedules -- setting the pace for preliminary-injunction arguments.

What readers should watch for
- Government declarations: Will the State Department put more of its factual predicate on the record?
- Narrative framing: Will the case be treated as a speech dispute or a foreign-policy matter?
- Parallel scrutiny: Congressional inquiries, FOIA litigation, and nonprofit oversight may proceed independently of the court case.
The January 5 hearing will not decide Ahmed's fate--but it will decide how much sunlight this dispute receives.
Conclusion: Beyond One Man's Visa
This case is no longer plausibly about a single individual's immigration status, nor about abstract disagreements over speech. It has become a system-level confrontation over how power, narrative authority, and constitutional protections are exercised across borders.
The record now before the public is extensive and internally consistent. It reveals a sustained pattern in which non-governmental organizations, operating through opaque funding structures, parliamentary privilege, and coordinated pressure campaigns, have functioned as de facto enforcement mechanisms against disfavored speech--often without due process, evidentiary testing, or meaningful avenues for redress. Within that pattern, Imran Ahmed does not appear as a peripheral actor or neutral researcher, but as a central architect and operator.
Against this backdrop, Ahmed's complaint does not merely contest the government's action; it collides directly with the factual basis for that action. The sanctions framework at issue is expressly designed to address foreign actors who, through institutional leverage rather than law, engineer the suppression of Americans' speech while remaining insulated from accountability. On the record now available, it is difficult to see how Ahmed's claims of retaliation overcome the substantial evidence that his conduct fits squarely within that framework.

What has emerged instead is a stark inversion. Ahmed now invokes the First Amendment as a shield, seeking constitutional protection at the very moment he faces consequences for having helped strip those same protections from others. He positions himself as a victim of political reprisal, even as his own work relied on reputational designation, institutional amplification, and procedural asymmetry to silence critics and targets who were afforded no comparable rights.
This is the phase in which unresolved constitutional tensions are no longer theoretical. They are being forced into the open through high-visibility conflicts, and no major political or institutional actor can plausibly avoid taking a position. The question is no longer whether speech is protected in the abstract, but whether those protections are reciprocal and principled, or selectively invoked by those who previously worked to deny them to others.
In more mythic terms, this is the "wounded tyrant" moment: the point at which an enforcer of narrative control--having been named and constrained--appears before the court claiming the status of the hunted, and of the victim. History suggests that this is when systems reveal their true logic, stripped of moral rhetoric and exposed by contradiction.
Whether the courts ultimately rule in favor of Ahmed or the government, the significance of this case is already clear. It is not about one man's visa. It is about who decides what speech may survive, which narratives acquire the force of law, and by what means power is exercised in the name of protecting democracy.
That question is now unavoidable--and it is squarely before the public, and before the court.
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