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Home, Voters Stand by Marjorie Taylor Greene After She Stood Up to Trump
Ms.
Greene’s resignation blindsided her conservative Georgia district, which had
stuck by her through ups and downs, including her split with the president.
By Rick
Rojas and Sean Keenan
Rick
Rojas and Sean Keenan reported from Georgia’s 14th Congressional District,
which Marjorie Taylor Greene has represented since 2021.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/22/us/georgia-marjorie-taylor-greene-voters.html
Nov. 22,
2025
A portion
of the country might have looked at Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene as a
symbol of how caustic and bewildering national politics had become, as she
spread conspiracy theories and falsehoods and heckled former President Joseph
R. Biden Jr. during a State of the Union address.
Back home
in Georgia, some of her constituents did not always like what she said or how
she said it. Plenty of others had no problem with her. Either way, voters in
her district in the northwestern corner of the state largely stood by her. They
respected Ms. Greene, many said, because there was never any doubt about where
she stood. And they appreciated that it was usually right alongside President
Trump.
The
toughest test of that loyalty emerged when a growing disillusionment with Mr.
Trump erupted into an explosive rift, leading to an abrupt announcement by Ms.
Greene on Friday night that she would resign from Congress. As blindsided
voters grappled Saturday with what might have driven Ms. Greene’s decision,
many of them were confident that it was not a lack of support from her
district.
“I feel
like she has stood her ground,” said Meredith Rosson, 43, a paralegal and the
chairwoman of the Republican Party in Chattooga County, a rural area hugging
the Alabama border.
And Ms.
Rosson stood with her.
Ms.
Greene’s drift away from the president was fueled in large part by her
persistent calls to make public files related to the disgraced financier and
convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. She had claimed that the Trump
administration was impeding a speedy and comprehensive release of the
documents. But those arguments were part of what was becoming a broader divide,
as she accused Mr. Trump of neglecting the pressing domestic concerns that had
been central to his winning appeal to voters in 2024.
In
response, Mr. Trump disavowed her and encouraged a Republican primary challenge
against her next year. He said that Ms. Greene, who was once a leading acolyte
of the Make America Great Again movement, was now a “ranting lunatic.”
Ms.
Greene then shocked her colleagues in Congress, as well as much of the nation,
and especially her constituents in Georgia, when she said she would step down
in January.
“Loyalty
should be a two-way street, and we should be able to vote our conscience and
represent our district’s interest,” she said in a video announcement.
In many
ways, the rift, and Ms. Greene’s subsequent resignation, have turned the
political reality in her district on its head. Some who were once enthusiastic
supporters have taken to calling her “Marjorie ‘Traitor’ Greene,” echoing the
president. Critics who had long viewed her as the embodiment of all they
loathed about politics are now suddenly, if skeptically, looking at her in a
more forgiving light.
But what
has perhaps been most striking is that, in a part of the country where the
president has deeply entrenched support, many Republicans are defying him by
refusing to abandon Ms. Greene.
On Friday
night, the local chapter of the Republican Party in Floyd County issued a
statement affirming its “unwavering support” for Ms. Greene, praising her for
working “tirelessly to support the needs and views of her constituents.”
But the
county party, like many Republicans who agreed with it, stressed that it was
trying to strike a balance. “Our support of Rep. Greene does not in any way,
however, diminish our total support for President Trump,” the statement said.
Ms.
Greene has been one of the Republican legislators who has been most adamant
about calling for the release of the Epstein files. She has also strayed from
others in her party over health care costs and the handling of the government
shutdown, among other issues.
“She’s
realized, ‘I need to do what’s right for my community and for people who are
mostly in the middle ground,’” said Brandon Pledger, who owns Alibi Prohibition
Lounge and Combat Market, a combined cocktail bar and gun shop in the strip of
storefronts in downtown Rome, Ga., a city of about 38,000 people, the largest
in Ms. Greene’s district.
Mr.
Pledger, a Republican who voted for Mr. Trump and who still broadly supports
him, particularly appreciated that Ms. Greene was critical of both Democrats
and Republicans in Congress over the government shutdown. For example, she
called out those in her party who failed to negotiate a solution that would
guard against increases in insurance premiums or that would provide an
alternative to make health care more affordable.
“They
couldn’t find middle ground,” said Mr. Pledger, 40. “They couldn’t do anything.
And what happened? The American people suffered.”
Ms.
Greene tapped into a swirling frustration both deeper and more intangible than
disagreements over individual issues. Mr. Pledger and others said they believed
she was speaking to a sense that elected officials were more inclined to
enforce political divisions than to solve daunting problems facing the country.
“You have
to be far left, or you have to be far right,” Mr. Pledger said. “What happened
to us — normal people, who just work every day, take care of our family, take
care of our kids, pump out 10 to 12 hours and go home?”
Ms.
Greene has increasingly stepped outside the conservative media ecosystem,
including in a recent CNN interview in which she apologized for using “toxic”
political rhetoric and vowed to no longer do so.
Some
onetime supporters say that was not the Marjorie Taylor Greene they signed up
for.
“When she
went on ‘The View,’ she really lost me,” said Tammy Leech, who lives in
Calhoun, Ga., and works for a flooring manufacturer, referring to Ms. Greene’s
recent appearance on the daytime talk show.
The
sprawling 14th Congressional District in Georgia extends from the bustling
suburbs of Atlanta across the forested foothills of the Appalachians to the
outskirts of Chattanooga. It is a part of the state that has been left largely
unscathed by Georgia’s evolution in recent years from reliably Republican to a
swing state. (Last year, Mr. Trump won counties in the district with as much as
83 percent of the vote.)
Ms.
Greene, who was elected in 2020, had attracted an unusual level of notoriety,
first as a candidate and then as a freshman member of Congress. The attention
came because she had promoted the pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory, which she
later disavowed, and because she had a history of making provocative and
incendiary statements, including questioning whether a plane had crashed into
the Pentagon on Sept. 11 and endorsing violent behavior.
In her
district, and even among Republicans, Ms. Greene has long been a deeply
polarizing figure.
The
campaign slogan of her Republican opponent in her first bid for office in 2020
was “All of the conservative, none of the embarrassment.” A lesser-known
candidate who has already entered the 2026 Republican primary has a page on his
website devoted to listing examples of what he calls Ms. Greene’s “nonstop
forays into delusional paranoia,” including referring to deadly school
shootings as hoaxes.
Ms.
Greene left other Republicans disenchanted as she sought influence by sidling
up to Kevin McCarthy, the unpopular Republican House speaker who was ousted in
2023 after a short and unproductive stint.
Jim
Coles, 67, is one of those Republicans. He has agreed with Mr. Trump. Ms.
Greene, he said, was a “traitor” — “not to the country, but to the Republican
Party, and to what we’re trying to accomplish as a party.”
Some
expressed hope that Ms. Greene’s shift reflected a deeper evolution — a step,
however modest, away from vitriol.
“We can
have a good conversation about things and it not turn into a fight,” said
Brooke Bearden, a 39-year-old bar manager.
Shiloh
St. Clair, a 23-year-old college student, underwent her own political
transformation as a conservative who drifted to the left. She once had strong
feeling of opposition toward Ms. Greene.
“I kind
of hate that she represents where I’m from,” Ms. St. Clair said.
But Ms.
St. Clair said she had been shown patience and empathy as she shed a glamorized
view of the South inspired by Scarlett O’Hara and learned some of the region’s
harsher realities. She was willing to extend similar grace to Ms. Greene.
“I’m all
for a redemption arc,” she said.
Before
her resignation, Kasey Carpenter, a Republican state representative from
Dalton, Ga., saw Ms. Greene’s “decoupling” from Mr. Trump as an opportunity for
the party. An exchange of conflicting ideas among Republicans was healthy, he
thought. Necessary, even.
“I think
people who are straight platform people, I wonder what their marriages look
like,” Mr. Carpenter said. “If you’re not arguing about some things, is it
real?”
Many
believe that, following Ms. Greene’s departure from Congress, she will find a
new act, perhaps running for another office. She joins a league of other
Georgia Republicans who have been successful despite running afoul of Mr.
Trump, the most notable among them Gov. Brian Kemp.
Mr.
Carpenter was more concerned for the future of the district, and, in turn, the
country. Ms. Greene’s resignation was a setback, he said, if only because it
meant losing a flawed yet unflinching voice whose support of the president
turned out to not be unconditional.
“I’m
hopeful that whoever decides to run,” he said, “will not just beat the same
drum.”
Pooja
Salhotra contributed reporting.
Rick Rojas is the Atlanta bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of the So


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