What’s
happening with Marjorie Taylor Greene? Why the Maga loyalist has won some
Democratic fans
She’s
been a true Maga believer in the past, but the Georgia representative has
lately shown a streak of independence
David
Smith in Washington and George Chidi in Atlanta
Sun 19
Oct 2025 12.00 BST
For years
she was one of Donald Trump’s most loyal foot soldiers. Marjorie Taylor Greene
trafficked in racist statements, indicated support for executing Democrats and
even floated conspiracy theories about Jewish space lasers. Beneath a red “Make
America great again” cap she became an instantly recognisable face of the Maga
movement.
Yet in
recent months the Georgia congresswoman has surprised friend and foe alike. On
issues ranging from healthcare to Gaza to the Jeffrey Epstein files, she has
broken ranks with Republicans and won unlikely fans among Democrats. The streak
of independence has stirred speculation about her motives – and future
ambitions.
Notably,
Greene has stopped short of directly criticising Trump himself and has so far
avoided incurring the president’s wrath. But her willingness to dissent from
the party line is all the more remarkable under a president who notoriously
prizes loyalty and punishes critics.
“I was
wrong about Marjorie Taylor Greene,” was the headline of an Atlanta
Journal-Constitution article last week by political columnist Patricia Murphy,
who wrote: “Even if you don’t agree with Greene on everything – or even most
things – you have to admire her willingness in this moment to say what is true,
even when other Republicans refuse to. Maybe it’s career suicide, or maybe it’s
leadership.”
Greene
long revelled in her role as a far-right provocateur. She led prison visits to
rioters arrested after the January 6 insurrection, called for Joe Biden’s
impeachment and, at last year’s State of the Union address, confronted Biden
while wearing a Maga hat and heckled him during his speech.
But since
Trump’s return to office, the 51-year-old has increasingly gone rogue on both
domestic and foreign policy. She criticised White House plans to send “billions
of dollars” worth of weapons to Ukraine and broke from the Republican party’s
longstanding support for Israel by describing its war in Gaza as a “genocide”.
She was
one of just four Republicans to sign on to a discharge petition to release
files related to the sex offender Epstein, repeatedly dismissed by Trump as a
“hoax”. Speaking at a press conference with Democratic congressman Ro Khanna,
she insisted: “The truth needs to come out. And the government holds the
truth.”
Greene
has been among the most outspoken critics of House speaker Mike Johnson’s
stance during the federal government shutdown, arguing that Republicans should
be in Washington rather than indefinite recess and it is they who have the
power to end the standoff.
She is
also siding with Democrats in their drive to continue the pandemic-era
temporary expansion of Affordable Care Act premium subsidies to help Americans
pay for upcoming insurance rate hikes.
In a
lengthy screed on social media, Greene wrote: “I’m going to go against everyone
on this issue because when the tax credits expire this year my own adult
children’s insurance premiums for 2026 are going to DOUBLE, along with all the
wonderful families and hard-working people in my district.
“No I’m
not towing the party line on this, or playing loyalty games. I’m a Republican
and won’t vote for illegals to have any tax payer funded healthcare or
benefits. I’m AMERICA ONLY!!! I’m carving my own lane.”
It is a
battle over the meaning of Maga. Greene denies that she is turning against her
own party. She told the Hill website this week: “I am 100% the same person
today as I was when I ran for Congress.” Indeed, her voting record in Congress
is still closely aligned with Trump. But she claims to be staying true to her
populist roots by siding with her constituents against the elites.
Andra
Gillespie, a political scientist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, said:
“Marjorie Taylor Greene is a very complex person and she’s a complex politician
and it looks like she’s making interesting choices. Overall she is still very
much a Maga-identified Trump-supporting Republican.
“That is
what is giving her latitude to be able to deviate from the party line and to
deviate from the Trump line when she thinks it is advantageous to do so. One of
the things that’s interesting about how she’s doing it is that she invokes
basically a delegate-style representation when she does this.”
The
Guardian put Greene’s political instincts to the test in a series of interviews
with voters and found concern about steep premium increases in health insurance
if the subsidies lapse.
Pete Van
Horn, a retiree who is a Republican, said: “We’ve worked all our lives and them
prices keep going up. That’s not right. We should get a break somewhere.”
Pat
Hayman, a retired schoolteacher from Calhoun, Georgia, said of Greene: “She
comes on a little hard but I basically agree with it. You know the healthcare
system needs overhauling. I’m on Medicare and Blue Cross-Blue Shield, and we’re
fine with that. But young couples? To me, it’s a business more so than taking
care of [them].”
Michael
Ross, an electrician from Floyd county, Georgia, laughed: “I think Marjorie
Taylor Greene is hilarious. I’ll probably vote for her again. I’ll be honest
with you. I don’t know what she thinks but I like to see shit stirred up.”
He added:
“I like her stirring the pot. Is she crazy? She might be crazy. I don’t know.
She’s got more information than I got. Like I said: I like to see the pot
stirred.”
To some
observers, Greene’s position is not so surprising. They note that Republicans
have never been as dedicated to small government as the mythology of Ronald
Reagan implies. Greene, they argue, is in line with the modern Republican
party’s economic populism, including Trump’s own thinking.
Henry
Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center thinktank in
Washington, said: ‘There are certainly many smaller government conservatives
but she’s far from being a lone wolf here.
“In the
question of support for working-class and middle-class Americans through
government action, she probably speaks for a very large segment of Republicans,
and a large group of people who would be Maga as opposed to old guard
Republicans.”
Others
suggest that Greene might have more personal motives for speaking out. She
reportedly began to explore the possibility of running for Georgia governor or
senator next year, only to be knocked back by the White House on the basis of
polling that showed her divisiveness would put statewide seats in jeopardy.
Jeff
Timmer, executive director of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group,
believes that Greene’s newfound willingness to speak out “can be attributed
more to a woman scorned than the evolution of human goodness in Marjorie Taylor
Greene”.
He said:
“They didn’t want her to run; she’s getting a pound of flesh. ‘You wanted to
put your thumb on me and thought I’d just play the loyal soldier? Well, I’m
going to defy you on some key things like the Epstein files or healthcare and
Medicaid.”
Yet
Greene has been careful to continue expressing support for Trump. She has
avoided – so far at least – an insult-laden rebuke on social media that could
spell the beginning of the end of her career, as for so many Republicans during
the president’s first term.
Her
stance could embolden other Republicans to carefully test the boundaries of
dissent. Maine senator Susan Collins has criticised the administration’s
handling of the shutdown and taken aim at budget director Russ Vought for
permanently laying off thousands of federal workers.
Texas
senator Ted Cruz recently compared comments from the Federal Communications
Commission chair, Brendan Carr – who hinted at punitive measures against
broadcasters – to “mafia tactics”.
Beyond
Capitol Hill, Oklahoma’s governor, Kevin Stitt, told the New York Times that he
opposed Trump’s move to send Texas national guard troops to Illinois as a
violation of “states’ rights”. And Utah’s governor, Spencer Cox, used X to
register his own protest, condemning the administration’s cancellation of North
America’s biggest solar project.
Gillespie
of Emory University commented: “What Marjorie Taylor Greene presents is a
challenge to the narrative that Republicans are a monolith at this point. Yes,
Trump has consolidated power. The ideology in Maga, in the Republican
coalition, has certainly shifted in a rightward direction and we have watched
politicians adjust to that.
“But the
Republican party still has some heterogeneity even as it is conservative and so
you are going to see people deviate from the party. The question is: when and
under what conditions do Republicans completely deviate from the Trump agenda
and oppose the Trump administration in a way that lasts for more than a week or
two?”

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