5 Million People Worldwide Sign the “End CCP” Petition — Witnessing a Global Anti-Communist Tide

Signed petitions for the ‘End CCP’ initiative, filling up a small cart. (Provided by the Tuidang Center)

[People News] On October 10, 2025, the Global Service Center for Quitting the Chinese Communist Party announced that after five years of international effort, the petition campaign “End the Evil Chinese Communist Party (End CCP)” has officially surpassed five million signatures. This milestone is not only a record for a grassroots movement, but also a sign of a growing moral awakening spreading throughout the Western world.

A Global Petition Born from the Pandemic

Unlike traditional Chinese community–led political activities, most End CCP signers come from diverse ethnic backgrounds in the U.S., Europe, and Australia. Many of them have never been to China, but they share one voice: reject totalitarianism, oppose lies, and defend human dignity.

The movement began in June 2020, when the COVID-19 (CCP Virus) pandemic was ravaging the world. The CCP was accused of covering up the virus’s origin, sparking widespread international doubt about its integrity and governing model. The Global Service Center for Quitting the CCP launched the petition, calling on the world to “End the Evil CCP” and stay away from disasters created by it.

The petition website, initially available in 16 languages, has now expanded to nearly 40 languages. Its banner slogan, “CCP Lied, People Died”, has become a common chant at rallies across the globe.

The campaign declares that the CCP’s decades-long rule has brought cultural destruction, persecution of faith, and massive human rights disasters—from the Cultural Revolution and the Tiananmen Massacre to the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners and Uyghurs—and that “this regime is not only China’s problem, but a threat to all humankind.”

A Wave of Signatures from Car Parades, Squares, and Streets

At the Flushing subway station in Queens, New York, on Santa Monica Beach in Los Angeles, and in Place de la Concorde in Paris, people can see “End CCP” banners and signature boards everywhere.

Volunteers from the Global Service Center wear yellow vests, handing out flyers and speaking in English, Spanish, and French to tell passersby about the CCP’s crimes and global influence. Many people stop to sign their names; one person wrote, “I’m not Chinese, but I oppose anyone who tramples on freedom.”

Starting in 2020, New York volunteers launched the “End CCP Car Parade” campaign, with cars carrying red-and-white banners driving through neighborhoods, business districts, and highways. The innovative format quickly spread across U.S. states, and later to Australia, Canada, and Europe.

By the end of 2024, the End CCP caravans had driven through all 50 U.S. states, from Alaska in the north to Key West, Florida in the south. Hundreds or even thousands of vehicles formed a “mobile Great Wall of Truth,” drawing countless onlookers to wave, film, and share the scenes online—creating a viral “wave of light.”

“Refuse to Be Silent”: Voices of the Signers

A retired teacher from Texas, Mary Jensen, said she had never paid attention to Chinese politics before, but when she saw Falun Gong practitioners showing images of persecution on the streets, she was shocked:
“This isn’t distant news—it’s a test of our humanity. I signed because silence equals complicity.”

At Federation Square in Melbourne, a young mother signed while holding her child’s hand. She told volunteers:
“I hope my child will grow up in a world where people can speak the truth freely.”

According to the Service Center’s statistics, over 80% of signers are non-Chinese. The movement has long transcended race and nationality, becoming a humanitarian action in the name of conscience.

Echoes from U.S. Politics and Society

The End CCP movement also reflects a changing American attitude toward the Chinese Communist regime. In the past two years, the U.S. government has expanded sanctions and export controls on CCP entities, and both parties in Congress have passed multiple bills addressing the CCP’s challenges in military, technology, and espionage infiltration.

In the media, outlets like The Wall Street Journal, Fox News, and Politico have successively published reports exposing the CCP’s human rights violations, technological theft, and overseas influence operations. In this broader environment, “anti-communism” is no longer a relic of the Cold War but a shared issue for free societies.

For many signers, End CCP represents not merely a political position but a moral boundary. California volunteer Susan Harris said:
“Once you understand the CCP’s crimes, you realize that signing your name isn’t for China—it’s for humanity.”

Global Resonance and Future Direction

Dr. Wang Zhiyuan, chairman of the Global Service Center for Quitting the CCP, stated:
“Rejecting the CCP and purging the evil spirit of communism is the shared wish of all humankind. The CCP is not just China’s scourge—it’s a demon that harms the entire world.”

From New York to London, Sydney to Berlin, the End CCP banners have appeared at rallies, parades, and music festivals. Volunteers say this has evolved from a movement into a spiritual awakening—helping the world to reexamine the cost of communism and the true meaning of freedom.

Over five years, through pandemic, war, digital surveillance, and ideological clashes, the global landscape has shifted dramatically. Amid all this, millions of signatures quietly record humanity’s determination to defend freedom and dignity.

Conclusion

As global signatures surpass five million, this campaign represents more than a number—it marks a choice of an era.

End CCP is not a political movement, but a moral awakening.

In the long river of history, when a totalitarian regime survives on lies, what truly ends it is not war or money—but the awakening and signatures of countless free souls.

(Source: Global Service Center for Quitting the CCP) △