News
Analysis
For
Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Rough Education in MAGA Politics
The
Georgia congresswoman strove to be both the ultimate Trump warrior and to be
taken seriously. She wound up in political exile.
Robert
Draper
By Robert
Draper
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/22/us/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene.html
Nov. 22,
2025
Marjorie
Taylor Greene arrived in Washington in January 2021 as a lusty warrior for the
recently defeated President Donald J. Trump. Less than five years later, she
appears to have lost all appetite for fighting.
On
Friday, even her close associates were stunned after the three-term Georgia
congresswoman posted a 10-minute video on X announcing that she would be
vacating her office on Jan. 5, one year before her term expires. One associate
said that she did not inform her inner circle until about 20 minutes before her
video went up.
In it,
Ms. Greene insisted that her decision had everything to do with her
disillusionment with the current sorry state of politics and was not a
politically calculated “4-D chess game” on her part.
The
answer, according to interviews with friends and associates, is that she had
become politically isolated, feeling betrayed by Mr. Trump, disgusted with her
own party and friendless among the Democratic opposition. When Mr. Trump
announced on Truth Social last week that he had had enough of Ms. Greene’s
apostasies, labeling her “Marjorie Traitor Greene” and threatening to run a
primary opponent in her district, Ms. Greene felt blindsided.
Terrified
by the ensuing wave of death threats aimed at her and her family from apparent
supporters of Mr. Trump, she could no longer see any upside to duking it out in
the political arena.
In
Homeric fashion, the ultimate MAGA warrior laid down her sword and limped home
to Rome, Ga.
A Run for
Higher Office?
In the
months before the breakup with Mr. Trump, Ms. Greene appeared to be moving more
swiftly away from her early far-right positions. She defied the administration
by opposing military aid to Israel, demanded that the Epstein files be released
and supported the extension of the health insurance subsidies passed during the
Biden administration. She appeared on “The View,” the popular ABC morning talk
show, and on CNN, where she told host Dana Bash, “I would like to say, humbly,
I’m sorry for taking part in the toxic politics.”
Speculation
that Ms. Greene is positioning herself for some higher electoral calling,
perhaps even a presidential run, is not unwarranted. Since she first declared
her candidacy for Congress in 2019, as a construction company businesswoman and
social media activist who embraced far-right conspiracy theories, Ms. Greene
has impressed Republican skeptics with her political acumen. She quickly became
one of the most recognizable figures in American politics.
A year
into her first term, she festooned her House office walls with fan letters from
well beyond the state of Georgia. Frequently in demand at MAGA-centric events,
Ms. Greene is also a prolific fund-raiser, although one who relies almost
entirely on small online donations. Once greeted with derision by
Washingtonians as a shrill and zany show pony, she is now seen more as a savvy
operator who understands the conservative base like few others.
Notably,
Ms. Greene in her exit video did not explicitly say goodbye to all that.
Several people close to her suggest that she has at times contemplated running
for higher office and may well revisit those ambitions. Still, the same people
say her decision to abandon Congress was less a crass play for 2028 and more a
reflection of how much she had come to dislike her job in the House. Ms. Greene
declined to comment for this story.
A Craving
for Attention
It
remains a source of frustration to Ms. Greene that mainstream media outlets
continue to harp on conspiratorial views she held before she decided to seek
office, such as her embrace of QAnon.
True, in
her prior life as a social media “citizen journalist” she once prowled the
halls of the Capitol, hounding House Democrats like Representatives Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Nancy Pelosi of California. But Ms. Greene often
pointed out that she reserved near-equal contempt for the Republicans who had
achieved so little when they held the majority during the first half of Mr.
Trump’s first term. In Ms. Greene’s mind, her 2020 campaign slogan, “Save
America Stop Socialism,” was as much about her party’s lethargy as it was about
the threat posed by Democrats.
Even Ms.
Greene’s close associates acknowledge that her craving for attention thwarted
her desire to be taken seriously. In 2022, she decided to replace her chief of
staff, a Georgia political associate, with Ed Buckham, who once served as chief
of staff to Tom DeLay, the former Republican House majority leader and one of
the wiliest legislators the G.O.P. has ever known. But Ms. Greene never
realized any significant legislative achievements, in part because she did not
cultivate relationships with Democrats, who regarded her as a pox on Congress.
The same
mutual abhorrence held true with establishment Republicans. Ms. Greene never
could bring herself to play the game within her own party. Unknown in Georgia
Republican circles when she decided to run, she became a statewide power only
when her alliance with Mr. Trump made it so. Eyed with distaste by traditional
GOP donors, Ms. Greene adopted an outsider’s I-don’t-care attitude just as Mr.
Trump had done in 2016.
Life in
Washington improved for Ms. Greene in 2022, when the Republicans reclaimed the
House. The new Republican speaker, Kevin McCarthy, took pains to court her
support in return for plum committee assignments and a voice in the House
majority’s agenda. But Ms. Greene’s alliance with Mr. McCarthy proved to be a
mixed blessing at best. The far-right House Freedom Caucus rebelled against the
speaker and, along the way, revoked Ms. Greene’s membership.
Throughout
her travails, she remained Mr. Trump’s earliest and loudest defender in the
House. Ms. Greene continually claimed that her twice-impeached “favorite
president” had been cheated out of victory in 2020, even as many in her party
hoped to move on from him. During Mr. Trump’s two years of exile, she became a
reliable warm-up act at his rallies. More than once, Ms. Greene told others,
Mr. Trump seemed to float the idea of her being his running mate.
When the
party finally coalesced around the former president and he became the nominee
in 2024, Mr. Trump directed Ms. Greene to sit beside him on the second day of
the Republican National Convention, just three days after he had been shot by a
would-be assassin.
Ms.
Greene had reason to expect that her unceasing loyalty would be rewarded in the
new administration. But Mr. Trump did not offer her a cabinet position. As the
chairwoman of the newly established House Oversight subcommittee to root out
government waste, Ms. Greene expected to be working in close partnership with
the White House’s program-slashing Department of Government Efficiency, headed
by Elon Musk. Instead, her subcommittee was largely adrift, languishing from
inattention after only a few hearings. She became aware that some senior West
Wing officials regarded her with disfavor, according to a former White House
official.
On the
Hill, Ms. Greene was fast becoming homeless. She did not get along with the new
Republican speaker, Mike Johnson. Her early antipathy toward progressive
Democrats like Ms. Ocasio-Cortez had been supplanted by ugly public spats with
two Republican colleagues, Representatives Nancy Mace of South Carolina and
Lauren Boebert of Colorado.
The
ongoing skirmishes between House leadership and the Freedom Caucus, combined
with Mr. Trump’s seeming disinterest in the legislative body, wore on Ms.
Greene’s patience. She contemplated running in Georgia for the Senate or
perhaps governor. When Mr. Trump did nothing to encourage her aspirations, it
began to dawn on Ms. Greene that her unflagging fidelity to the president was
taken for granted, according to individuals familiar her thinking.
Personally
injured though she was, Ms. Greene also told associates that she believed the
Trump administration was straying from its “America First” principles. Both
before and during the recent 43-day government shutdown, she spent time in her
district interacting with voters. Constituents approached her to ask why the
government was spending so much money in Ukraine and Israel. Some of them
referred to the Israeli government’s occupation of Gaza as a “genocide.” Ms.
Greene became the first House Republican to adopt the term.
Her
constituents in the 14th district also voiced dismay about the high cost of
housing. She was outraged to learn that private equity firms were buying up
whole neighborhoods in Georgia and elsewhere. When her two adult daughters
informed her that her party’s spending bill would cause their health insurance
rates to double, Ms. Greene joined a chorus of dissent that included few if any
other prominent Republicans.
But Ms.
Greene was particularly distressed by Mr. Trump’s refusal to release the
Epstein files. She had met with several of Mr. Epstein’s accusers in her
Washington office. Though she did not claim to have suffered abuse as they had,
Ms. Greene later told others that she could understand what it was like as a
woman to be standing up to powerful men.
On Nov.
4, the five women who co-host “The View” were prepared for Ms. Greene to be in
the mood to brawl, according to a person who was on the set. Instead, the hosts
were surprised by her agreeable demeanor. At the end of the segment, Ms. Greene
pointedly said to them, “Women to women, we need to pave a new path.”
A Life in
Limbo
Ms.
Greene remains highly popular back home. Still, in Mr. Trump’s race against
Vice President Kamala Harris last November, he carried the counties in Ms.
Greene’s deep-red district by greater margins than she did against her
Democratic opponent, Shawn Harris. The prospect of running in 2026 against a
well-funded challenger handpicked by the president would have forced what she
referred to her in her video as “my sweet district” to pick sides.
Ms.
Greene has expressed confidence that she would have prevailed in a 2026
primary. Even in victory, however, she would have likely remained reviled by
her party’s leader. Ms. Greene is also convinced, as she said in her video
announcement, that the Republicans will lose the midterms next year and that
the House Democratic majority will likely pursue more investigations against
Mr. Trump. In such a scenario, Republicans would rally around the president.
But could she, after Mr. Trump’s efforts to destroy her career?
There is
little chance that Ms. Greene’s saga will end with her changing parties,
despite the supportive calls and emails she has received from some Democrats.
For that matter, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and other Democratic members have openly
expressed skepticism that Ms. Greene, who promoted Mr. Trump’s baseless claims
of election fraud that led to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, is sincerely
contrite and intent on pursuing a kinder, gentler mode of politics.
All of
which leaves Ms. Greene in limbo. According to a close associate, her only
immediate aim is to try and enjoy life for the first time in a long while.
Robert
Draper is based in Washington and writes about domestic politics. He is the
author of several books and has been a journalist for three decades.


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