
Did you know Indian-origin FBI chief Kash Patel is a Liverpool fan?
Left: Kash Patel/X, Right: AI Generated image of Kash Patel in Anfield stadium
By all accounts, Kashyap 'Kash' Patel's career arc is pure Washington. A former public defender turned national security aide, Trump insider, and now the newly-confirmed Director of the FBI, Patel is no stranger to controversy, scrutiny, or headlines. But few could've predicted that one of his most viral moments this year wouldn't come from a congressional hearing or a classified memo, but from a football tie.
Yes, a
Liverpool FC
tie.
Not just any tie either. Red and white stripes with a Liverbird crest, the mythical symbol of the city and the club. He wore it unapologetically, first at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in December 2024, and again during a pivotal confirmation moment on January 30, 2025. Then, on April 28, he posted it himself on X (formerly Twitter), proudly captioning it:
'#YNWA… Liverpool PL Champs.. Our good luck tie'
— Kash_Patel (@Kash_Patel)
The image went viral, amassing over half a million views and 10,000+ likes. The response was immediate, and it wasn't just the tie that caught attention, it was the deeply symbolic gesture. For Liverpool fans, known for their political passion and
working-class roots
, the image of Patel, with his history and political alignment, sparked debate.
This moment was unique because it came from someone who, in many ways, represented a far cry from the ethos of Liverpool FC. The club, rooted in socialist ideals and shaped by the legacy of Bill Shankly, who once said, 'The socialism I believe in... is everyone working for each other, everyone having a share of the rewards' These ideals still pulse through the club's culture, reflected in both the anthem 'You'll Never Walk Alone' and the collective identity of its fans.
So imagine the cognitive dissonance among those fans when they saw Patel, widely criticized by progressive circles, and aligned with political forces that stand in stark contrast to Liverpool's historical ethos, wearing the Liverbird over his heart.
Patel's fandom isn't newly acquired. Eagle-eyed fans noticed the same tie back in December. Getty Images confirmed the authenticity after some suspected digital fakery, it was, after all, an age of AI-generated everything. But the tie is real. The fandom is real. And, for a moment, the internet was united in confusion, amusement, and spirited debate.
Liverpool fans, passionate, proudly political, and fiercely protective of their club's identity, were quick to respond.
One Redditor on r/LiverpoolFC exclaimed:
'Just seen a picture of Kash Patel wearing a Liverpool tie.'
Another, more bluntly:
'F*** no!!'
On X, a user summed up the collective reaction:
'Hope he knows what the club stands for.'
That comment, while sharp, touches on something deeper: a perceived tension between the ethos of Liverpool FC and the politics Patel has been associated with. Liverpool is a club rooted in socialist values and working-class pride, famously shaped by legendary manager Bill Shankly.
Yet here's where things get wonderfully complicated. For Indian football fans, Patel's gesture was more than a viral moment it was representation. An Indian-origin official, of Gujarati descent, raised in East Africa, now leading the FBI and casually repping one of the most iconic clubs in world football. In a globalized game, that matters.
Football fandom doesn't always align neatly with ideology. Just as you'll find lifelong Barcelona fans in small villages across West Africa, or
Manchester United
tattoos on teenagers in Bangkok, Kash Patel's Liverpool tie reminds us of the truly borderless nature of the sport.
This isn't to say politics are irrelevant. The reaction to Patel's choice of club shows that football culture is fiercely tribal and unafraid to defend its values. But it also reveals something more human: that people are allowed contradictions. That love for a team often begins not in policy papers or political manifestos, but in childhood memories, an unforgettable match, a YouTube highlight reel, or a dad's jersey passed down.
Liverpool, for all its storied history and working-class roots, is also a global brand. Owned by American investors, beloved by celebrities like Dua Lipa,
Daniel Craig
, and
Samuel L. Jackson
, and streamed in 180 countries every week. And now, it counts the Director of the FBI among its fans.
Kash Patel's tie may never appear in a club museum, and Anfield faithful may never chant his name. But in a world so often divided, the simple act of wearing that Liverbird to a Senate hearing was a reminder that the game is still the world's greatest unifier.
Because in football, as in life, you never quite know who's walking beside you, singing the same anthem, nervously eyeing the league table, and believing, fiercely, that You'll Never Walk Alone.
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