Marjorie
Taylor Greene Criticizes Trump’s Plan to Speed Weapons to Ukraine
The
right-wing congresswoman from Georgia suggested that the president’s new
proposal to help speed weapons to Ukraine betrays the promise to voters to end
U.S. involvement in foreign conflicts.
Robert
Jimison
By Robert
Jimison
Reporting
from the Capitol
July 14,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/14/us/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene-trump-ukraine.html
Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Georgia, on Monday harshly criticized
President Trump’s new plan to help speed weapons deliveries to Ukraine, saying
it breaks a key promise that he and many in his party made to voters to end
U.S. entanglement in conflicts overseas.
“It’s not
just Ukraine; it’s all foreign wars in general and a lot of foreign aid,” Ms.
Greene said in an interview, arguing that Mr. Trump was turning his back on the
America First approach that helped secure sweeping victories for him and
Republicans. “This is what we campaigned on. This is what I promised also to my
district. This is what everybody voted for. And I believe we have to maintain
the course.”
Her comments
were in response to Mr. Trump’s announcement from the Oval Office earlier in
the day, when he laid out plans to sell weapons to NATO countries that would
then send those arms to Ukraine. The president emphasized that the arrangement
would come at no cost to U.S. taxpayers, addressing a key concern among
Republicans increasingly wary of the war’s price tag.
But Ms.
Greene was unconvinced, arguing that Americans would bear costs, and that there
was no scenario in which the United States would avoid involvement.
“Without a
shadow of a doubt, our tax dollars are being used,” she said, arguing that
indirect costs such as deploying American troops to provide training on the
weapons being sent, would entangle the United States financially and
logistically in the conflict. She also noted that the United States is the
largest contributor to NATO, saying those indirect costs are being borne by
American taxpayers. “And so it is U.S. involvement,” she said.
The issue of
foreign aid has repeatedly put Ms. Greene at odds with many in her own party,
and recently, with Mr. Trump himself. She has also been harshly critical of the
president’s bellicose approach to Iran. She insists that Mr. Trump’s base is
with her, not with his recent more hawkish approach, which included a threat
against Russia to accept a peace deal or be hit with crippling financial
penalties.
“I said it
on every rally stage: ‘No more money to Ukraine. We want peace.’ We just want
peace for those people,” Ms. Greene said, recalling how those pronouncements
routinely drew the loudest cheers as she traveled the country stumping for Mr.
Trump.
“And guess
what? People haven’t changed.”
Other
Republicans who have long questioned U.S. aid to Ukraine have avoided taking
issue with Mr. Trump’s reversal.
Representative
Warren Davidson of Ohio praised Mr. Trump’s plan as a pragmatic approach that
avoids direct aid.
“The
president really gets it right in saying, ‘Hey, we’ll sell NATO countries these
weapons and if they want to pay for them, they can buy them,’ ” Mr. Davidson
said during an interview on CNN, adding that he too believes “this is not our
war.”
But Ms.
Greene said Mr. Trump’s foreign policy decisions are inseparable from the
domestic concerns she says dominate her district, particularly the economic
anxiety of working-class people and what she characterized as a pervasive sense
of being left behind by those in Washington sent to represent them.
“No one’s
walking around thinking about Ukraine. No one’s walking around thinking about
Russia. They’re just not,” she said. “They walk around and all they think about
is their bills, their problems and the road that may look like crap in front of
their house — or they can’t buy a house.”
And she
warned that voters would turn away from Mr. Trump and Republicans if they
failed to hold to the America First promises that helped deliver them control
of the White House and both chambers of Congress.
“We’re
opening the door for younger generations to turn to radical leaders,” Ms.
Greene said.
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