'She is weighing us down': Georgia GOP cringes at
Marjorie Taylor Greene spectacle
State Republicans worry the first-term congresswoman
will taint the entire 2022 ticket with a stamp of conspiracy theory and
extremism.
By MARC
CAPUTO
01/31/2021
06:37 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/31/marjorie-taylor-greene-georgia-gop-cringes-464170
The Georgia
GOP is tearing itself apart in a civil war. It lost two Senate seats in an ill-fated
January run-off election. And the once-Republican suburbs in metro Atlanta —
the most populous part of the state — have bolted toward the Democratic side.
Now, it’s
contending with another budding public relations catastrophe: Rep. Marjorie
Taylor Greene, the newly elected congresswoman whose extremist beliefs and
promotion of bizarre conspiracy theories have rocketed her to national
notoriety.
The calls
for censure and her removal from Congress don’t appear to have damaged her
standing in her conservative north Georgia district — and may have even
strengthened the so-called QAnon Congresswoman there for now. She tweeted
Friday that she raised $1.6 million off all the controversy and on Saturday
told her 300,000 followers she just had a chat with a supportive Donald Trump —
the former president who has referred to her as a “future Republican star.”
This is
what a nightmare scenario looks like.
With the
party reeling in the wake of its 2020 unraveling — when it lost too many
centrist voters — state Republicans now worry Greene will emerge as the face of
the GOP, tainting the entire ticket with a stamp of conspiracy theory and
extremism in the run-up to the 2022 midterms.
“If you
have any common sense, you know she's an anchor on the party. She is weighing
us down,” said Gabriel Sterling, a Republican election administrator who became
a leading voice criticizing the baseless election conspiracy theories espoused
by Trump and his supporters like Greene.
“Some
people are saying maybe [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi will throw her out” of
Congress, Sterling said, referring to the House speaker. “The Democrats would
never throw her out. They want her to be the definition of what a Republican
is. They’re gonna give her every opportunity to speak and be heard and look
crazy — like what came out Wednesday, the Jewish space laser to start fires. I
mean, I don't know how far down the rabbit hole you go.”
Judging
from old social media posts and videos that surfaced last week, that hole is
fairly deep. Greene has promoted the conspiracy theory that space lasers caused
California wildfires, that school shootings were hoaxes and suggested that
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should be executed for treason.
Greene is
expected to play a pivotal role as a campaign issue in 2022 when Sterling’s
boss, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, runs for reelection along with two
other top Republicans, Gov. Brian Kemp and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan.
All three
are likely to face primary challenges, but Raffensperger’s role overseeing
elections in the state and his office’s decision to secretly record Trump
asking him to somehow “find” votes to overturn the presidential election
results have made him a top target of Trump supporters.
Against
that backdrop, Greene — who also will be running for reelection in the
conservative northwest corner of the state, where Republicans need to campaign
— is expected to have an elevated role.
Establishment
Republicans worry that if the GOP nominates conservatives from the party’s
Trump and Greene wing, they’ll run the risk of suffering the same fate as
Republican Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who lost Jan. 5.
Loeffler’s
opponent, Sen. Raphael Warnock, is up for reelection in 2022 and could share
the ticket with Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Democratic gubernatorial nominee who is
gearing up to run again.
Both
Democrats are Black, heightening the issue of race — an issue that has dogged
Greene, who has a history of making racist and racially insensitive remarks.
Top
Loeffler advisers say Trump probably cost her the election and that Greene
wasn’t a factor. But she could be in 2022 after the saturation coverage of
Greene’s past comments.
“Greene was
just a symptom of what’s going on in the Republican Party in the state and,
frankly, the nation, in our election,” a Loeffler adviser said. “But in 2022,
she’s going to be a symbol, assuming she’s not now already.”
During
Greene’s 2020 race, Kemp privately advised Greene to “tone it down,” according
to a source briefed on the conversation. But he’s now in such a weakened
position from a longstanding feud with Trump that he’s leaving Greene alone, at
least for the time being.
“We’re
taking fire and there’s not much we can do right now,” said a Kemp adviser.
Chip Lake,
an adviser to 2020 Senate candidate and former Rep. Doug Collins, echoed other
Georgia Republicans who hoped that President Joe Biden and the Democrats who
control Congress would overreach and make the state swing rightward during the
2022 midterms.
Until then,
he said, Kemp and other top Republicans are playing for time.
“It’s the
legislative session here in Georgia, so Kemp can say he’s focusing on that and
that Marjorie Taylor Greene is a federal problem,” said Lake. “But over time,
she’s going to become Kemp’s problem and she has the potential to be a problem
for all of us.”
House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is under pressure to punish Greene, but Georgia
Republican insiders fear he might not sanction her because Greene represents an
energetic wing of the party and he’ll feel he can’t afford to risk punishing
one of Trump’s favored office-holders.
Some
Georgia Republicans fault McCarthy and his allies in the House Freedom Caucus
for initially supporting Greene’s congressional bid and then doing little to
stop her during the 2020 primary after her incendiary social media posts
initially came to light.
At least
one member of the state’s GOP congressional delegation, Rep. Jody Hice,
withdrew his endorsement during the campaign, saying he found Greene’s
statements “appalling and deeply troubling.”
After Hice
yanked his support from Greene, a group of Republicans sought to drum up
support for an outside political committee to take her on during the primary,
but they couldn’t raise money because “McCarthy was zero help,” according to
one strategist involved in the discussions.
The group
even released a proposed TV ad on YouTube featuring Hice’s decision — the spot
called her a “phony” because she moved to the district to run for the seat.
Another operative said a different group of Republicans had a plan for yet
another committee, but “McCarthy waived off the donors. We couldn’t raise
money.”
Asked about
the accusations, a McCarthy spokesperson did not comment on them but said her
“comments are deeply disturbing and Leader McCarthy plans to have a
conversation with the Congresswoman about them.”
Georgia
Republicans expect Greene will face a primary challenge, and some hope she
could somehow be drawn into a tougher seat during redistricting. But they
acknowledge she’s popular in her district.
Greene’s
primary opponent in 2020, John Cowan, is considering running against her again.
He faulted McCarthy, Trump’s White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and Ohio
Rep. Jim Jordan for backing her. He said Democrats are already making Greene,
known by her initials “MTG,” the face of the Republican Party — similar to how
Republicans sought to brand Democrats as the party of New York Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez.
“MTG is the
AOC of the GOP. But as much as I hate to say it, AOC is nowhere as crazy as
this,” Cowan said. “I’m a neurosurgeon. I diagnose crazy every day. It took
five minutes talking to her to realize there were bats in the attic. And then
we saw she had skeletons in the closet.”
A
spokesperson for Greene did not return emails seeking comment for this story,
nor did state GOP Chair David Shafer.
One of
Greene’s close allies is Georgia lawyer Lin Wood, who was at the center of the
state GOP conflict and represented her during the primary by threatening legal
action against a Cowan supporter who criticized her on social media. Advisers
to Cowan’s campaign, which featured the controversy in an ad, said they found
it ironic that Greene — who has worn a “censorship” mask to protest large tech
companies that flag posts and suspend accounts — blocked the man featured in
the ad and other critics on her Facebook page.
Greene had
an early leg up in her crowded 2020 primary because she was running for another
seat in the state, but switched to the 14th Congressional District when Rep.
Tom Graves unexpectedly retired. No one else had a campaign staff or the top
backing Greene already had, thanks to McCarthy and his allies, said Luke
Martin, GOP chair in Floyd County, one of the 12 counties in the district.
Martin said
Greene worked hard by holding multiple events and is continuing to give town
halls in the district. And, he said, she’s not talking about QAnon or other
wild conspiracy theories, nor did she on the stump.
“The folks
I’ve talked to here are saying, ‘I like Marjorie but, wow, I wish she didn’t
say that stuff,’” Martin said. “The Marjorie we know in the district is not
this laser-beam-from-space Twitter person.”
In Gordon
County, GOP Chair Kathleen Thorman said there’s a feeling that Greene has been
inaccurately portrayed in the mainstream news media. Greene’s constituents,
Thorman said, appreciated some of her early actions in Congress, such as her
petition to impeach Biden, because people want to know more about his son’s
business dealings when he was vice president.
“People are
mad because they feel Congress and the media are trying to silence their voice.
They voted for her and they feel it’s their voice being silenced,” Thorman
said. “In two years, when she runs again, we’ll see what happens.”
Tony
Abernathy, the Murray County GOP chair, echoed a similar sentiment in a text
message: “The real story is we love Marjorie Taylor Greene and are tired of
national media coming into Georgia trying to tell us how to think in her
district.”
Brian
Robinson, an adviser to former Republican Gov. Nathan Deal, fretted that the
criticisms of Greene will lead to just the sort of rallying effect she’s seeing
in the district and in her fundraising, elevating her profile and ensuring that
Republicans statewide are “constantly being put in this circular firing squad
about why we’re losing elections.”
Greene, he
said, has an “it” factor and a mastery of social media that ensures attention
from the news media, outrage from her critics and adulation and campaign
contributions from her base.
“Here’s the
problem with Marjorie Taylor Greene: you can’t look away. She has great camera
presence. She has great TV presence. She’s a natural, a true talent,” Robinson
said. “The question is whether she’s a moron who’s a natural talent or is she
just a cynical manipulator?”
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