Greene
Calls Gaza Crisis a ‘Genocide,’ Hinting at Rift on the Right Over Israel
Marjorie
Taylor Greene was the first Republican in Congress to use the term to describe
the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza. But others in the MAGA movement have
expressed growing concern about Israel.
Robert
Jimison Annie
Karni
By Robert
Jimison and Annie Karni
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/us/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene-gaza-genocide.html
July 29,
2025
Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, an avatar of MAGA politics on Capitol Hill,
this week became the first Republican in Congress to describe the situation in
Gaza as a “genocide,” breaking sharply with her party in an indication of
growing skepticism on the right about Israel’s conduct of the war.
“It’s the
most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct. 7 in Israel was horrific and
all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and
starvation happening in Gaza,” Ms. Greene said in a social media post on Monday
evening.
Her
comments drew a clear contrast with the vast majority of Republicans in
Congress, who have made unqualified support for Israel a hallmark of their
foreign policy approach. Many of them, including Ms. Greene in the past, have
attacked Democrats who have criticized Israel as antisemitic and sympathetic to
terrorists. The vast majority of Republicans have not budged from that stance.
But Ms.
Greene’s unvarnished language spoke to a simmering rift on the right just as
President Trump on Monday acknowledged the starvation in Gaza after largely
deflecting on the issue for months. Mr. Trump broke with President Benjamin
Netanyahu of Israel, who has said there is no starvation in the war-torn
enclave.
In recent
weeks, Ms. Greene and some other right-wing Republicans have grown more
outspoken in opposing what is happening in the Middle East, particularly after
Mr. Trump bombed Iran, enraging some in his “America First” base. The
skepticism is not limited to Ms. Greene or to Capitol Hill, and appears to be
gaining ground particularly among a younger generation less reflexively
supportive of Israel.
At a
recent conservative student conference, Dave Smith, a libertarian commentator,
drew applause during a debate moderated by the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk
when he bluntly rejected the idea that the United States should be in lock step
with Israel.
“Obviously,
Christians and Jews and Muslims have a connection to that land, but that
doesn’t mean we have to bomb Iran for Israel,” he said onstage. He added that
it also “doesn’t mean that we have to support Israel slaughtering people in
Gaza.”
Matthew
Brooks, the chief executive of the Republican Jewish Coalition, denounced Ms.
Greene’s remarks as “part of an ongoing pattern of her saying outrageous and
outlandish ridiculous things,” and said that Mr. Trump, who is “clearly
standing unequivocally with Israel,” defines the MAGA point of view.
“This is
not about it being the dam breaking in MAGA world,” he said.
But he
also acknowledged an uptick in skepticism toward Israel among younger people on
the right, attributing it to their ignorance about the issues.
“What
we’re seeing among young MAGA people is an ill-informed view of things,” Mr.
Brooks said, adding that it was challenging “to educate this generation” while
working with other groups.
“I don’t
think they are anti-Israel; I think they are getting incorrect information and
are getting impacted by social media,” he said.
Stephen
K. Bannon, the former White House chief strategist who now hosts an influential
right-wing podcast, said that even though Ms. Greene was in the distinct
minority among congressional Republicans, her views reflected her political
base.
“Marjorie
Taylor Greene just reflects her constituency; I don’t think she’s an outlier at
all,” Mr. Bannon said in an interview on Tuesday, adding that she “is
channeling hard-core evangelical Christians.”
Should
that view take hold more broadly inside the G.O.P., it would be a remarkable
shift from the traditional Republican foreign policy view of Israel, which is
driven in large part by Christian beliefs in the biblical importance of
Jerusalem.
It is not
clear how many other Republicans will follow the lead of Ms. Greene, who has
long been among the few G.O.P. members of Congress who publicly questions
American support for Israel. The Georgia Republican, the first QAnon supporter
to be elected to Congress, also has trafficked in antisemitic conspiracy
theories, including when she suggested in a 2018 Facebook post that a
devastating wildfire that ravaged California was started by “a laser” beamed
from space and controlled by a prominent Jewish banking family with connections
to powerful Democrats.
Still,
Ms. Greene is not alone among her Republican colleagues in criticizing what is
happening in Gaza.
“Standing
with Israel means eliminating every barbaric Hamas terrorist,” Representative
Lance Gooden of Texas wrote on social media, in a quote Ms. Greene
recirculated. “It also means rejecting the killing and starvation of children
in Gaza.”
In the
Senate on Tuesday, there were few signs of any shift among Republicans.
Senator
Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, said there was no genocide
occurring. Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina said the label was an
inflammatory distraction. And when asked for his view, Senator Bernie Moreno of
Ohio simply repeated “Hamas! Hamas! Hamas!” Once the group laid down its
weapons, he added, “we’re good to go.”
Ms.
Greene, however, has issued a series of escalating criticisms of Israel.
Earlier
this month, she said in a statement that “Israel bombed the Catholic Church in
Gaza, and that entire population is being wiped out as they continue their
aggressive war in Gaza.” The remarks were made after a failed bid, led by Ms.
Greene, to strip $500 million of American military funding that Congress had
approved as part of its annual defense support for Israel.
The
effort failed with only six members — two Republicans and four Democrats — voting in favor. That coalition included
Representative Rashida Tlaib, Democrat of Michigan and the only Palestinian
American serving in Congress.
The
pairing of Ms. Greene and Ms. Tlaib was an unlikely one. Ms. Greene two years
ago led a failed effort to censure Ms. Tlaib, accusing her of “antisemitic
activity” and “sympathizing with terrorists” after the Democrat spoke at a
pro-Palestinian protest about the “dehumanizing conditions” in Gaza and called
for “lifting the blockade” against humanitarian aid.
On
Sunday, Ms. Greene posted on social media that she could “unequivocally say
that what happened to innocent people in Israel on Oct 7th was horrific. Just
as I can unequivocally say that what has been happening to innocent people and
children in Gaza is horrific.”
Annie
Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times. She writes features and
profiles, with a recent focus on House Republican leadership.


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