House votes to remove Republican extremist
Marjorie Taylor Greene from committee roles
Vote largely along party lines serves as rebuke over
congresswoman’s incendiary and racist statements
Daniel
Strauss in Washington
@danielstrauss4
Fri 5 Feb
2021 00.06 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/04/marjorie-taylor-greene-congress-democrats-committees
The US
House of Representatives has voted to strip the extremist Republican
congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia of her committee assignments,
in a stark rebuke over her incendiary and racist statements.
Greene has
been a stated supporter of the QAnon myth, for years pushing unfounded
conspiracy theories and lies that included racist and antisemitic tropes.
The vote
split largely along party lines, with 230 voting in favor and 199 voting
against. Just 11 Republicans, including Adam Kinzinger and Brian Fitzpatrick,
joined with Democrats to strip Greene of her positions on the House budget and
education and labor committees.
Just before
the vote, the House majority leader, Steny Hoyer, the second-highest-ranking
Democrat in the chamber, delivered an impassioned speech against Greene’s
hostile behavior towards other lawmakers.
He
displayed a poster of an image that Greene had posted on Facebook that showed
her holding an AR-15 with the set of the progressive lawmakers in Congress
known as “the Squad” in the background. The poster read: “Squad’s worst
nightmare”.
“The
squad’s worst enemy. AR-15 in hand,” Hoyer said as he pointed to the text on
the poster, an apparent threat to the Democratic congresswomen, who include
Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tlaib. “I have never, ever
seen that before.”
A day
earlier, the House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, the top congressional
Republican, had declined to take action against Greene, despite wider pressure
from members of Congress to push some kind of punitive measure for uncovered
past statements and social media posts.
These
included supporting the assassination of Democratic members of Congress,
denying that a plane crashed into the Pentagon on 11 September 2001, and
perpetuating the myth that the Parkland, Florida, school shooting in 2018 was
faked.
In a
private meeting with her colleagues on Wednesday night, Greene received a
standing ovation for apologizing for her association with QAnon.
On
Thursday, Greene addressed her past statements under the threat of losing a
significant proportion of her legislative power. She stressed that she now
believed “school shootings are absolutely real”, that they should be taken
seriously, and that “9/11 absolutely happened”.
She
portrayed her descent into conspiracy theories as a misguided period in her
life that was over when she realized the falseness of the movement.
“I never
once during my entire campaign said QAnon. I never once said any of the things
that I am being accused of today during my campaign,” Greene said. Until her
Thursday speech, Greene had not publicly denied any of her past statements and
avoided having to address them directly.
In
December, after she was elected, Greene praised a tweet promoting the QAnon
movement.
Democrats
have been pushing for Greene to either be expelled from Congress or severely
punished if she should stay. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican
minority leader, has called Greene’s past comments “looney lies”.
In arguing
that Greene should lose her assignments, Democrats pointed to the now former
congressman Steve King of Iowa, a Republican, who lost his committee
assignments after associating with neo-Nazis and making racist statements for
years.
On
Thursday, the House rules committee chairman, Jim McGovern, a Democrat, argued
that Greene was not entitled to her committee postings.
“Serving on
a committee is not a right, it is a privilege and when someone encourages
violence against a member they should lose that privilege,” McGovern said.
After
Greene’s speech, McGovern signaled that it was insufficient.
“I stand here
today still deeply, deeply troubled and offended by the things that she has
posted and said and still not apologized for,” McGovern said.
Republicans
largely refrained from defending Greene’s previous comments directly and
instead argued that taking away her committee appointments would establish a
slippery slope.
Austin
Scott of Georgia skeptically asked during a floor speech whether Democrats
would stop with Greene if successful.
“We know
better. We know better,” Scott said of his Republican colleagues.
Tom Cole of
Oklahoma, McGovern’s Republican counterpart on the rules committee, argued that
taking away Greene’s committees “opens up troubling questions about how we
judge future members of Congress”.

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