In late July 2020, during the forced closing of the
Chinese Consulate in
Houston by the
United States government, protesters critical of the
People's Republic of China gathered outside the
consulate with flags of the New Federal State of China. In August 2020, supporters of the organisation protested the arrest of Bannon. The group has also been accused of spreading disinformation in Canada about COVID-19, and holding protests accusing people associated with Chinese dissident groups of being "spies". The group has also participated in anti-vaccine campaigns and promotion of more recent therapies such as
ivermectin. The group has been heavily involved in the spread of awareness about deals US president-elect
Joe Biden's son,
Hunter Biden, had been involved in, in both China and Ukraine. They have also claimed to have video evidence of
sexual abuse in which he was involved, and posted videos online which have been viewed tens of millions of times, but neither the source nor the representations in the videos could be verified as genuine. YouTube influencer Lude was the first to mention the videos in late September 2020, posted to his channel with 200,000 subscribers, and the stories have subsequently been reported extensively on Guo's media outlets,
GTV Media Group and
G News. it still sparked criticism from Pakistani politicians and was seen by analysts as a rift in
China-Pakistan relations.
Internal conflict John Pan, a Chinese migrant to Australia active in
human rights advocacy, was drawn into the inner circle of 18 members, which included Chinese dissidents and social media influencers, and worked with Guo for a few months in 2019. After becoming disillusioned and leaving the group in late 2019, Guo branded him a "CCP spy", and in October 2020 a group of people carrying banners bearing NFSC and Himalaya Australia logos and the words "Kick the CCP's agent out of Australia!" stood outside his house chanting those words. Pan and Texan pastor
Bob Fu are suing Guo for
defamation. ==See also==