Marjorie Taylor Greene Says She Plans to Resign in January
Ms.
Greene, who was elected in 2020, had positioned herself as a die-hard Trump
supporter until a series of recent ruptures with the president, who recently
unendorsed her.
Annie
Karni
By Annie
Karni
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/21/us/politics/marjorie-taylor-greene-resigns.html
Published
Nov. 21, 2025
Updated
Nov. 22, 2025, 12:05 a.m. ET
Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene, the hard-right Georgia Republican, said on Friday night
that she would resign from Congress in January.
Her
announcement came days after President Trump branded her a “traitor” for
breaking with him and helping compel the Justice Department to release its
files related to Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender.
Ms.
Greene, who was elected in 2020 and positioned herself as a die-hard Trump
supporter until a series of recent ruptures with the president on a variety of
issues, made the abrupt announcement in a video and statement she posted
online, filmed from her home in Georgia, her Christmas tree on display behind
her.
“Loyalty
should be a two-way street, and we should be able to vote our conscience and
represent our district’s interest,” Ms. Greene wrote in a long post. She said
that if she had been cast aside by “MAGA Inc,” it was indicative that “many
common Americans have been cast aside and replaced as well.”
In a
phone interview on Friday night with an ABC News reporter, Mr. Trump called Ms.
Greene’s plans “great news for the country.”
It is
extremely unusual for a member of Congress to up and leave in the middle of a
term, barring an illness or some extenuating circumstance that makes it
impossible to carry on.
But Ms.
Greene said she had made the decision to leave because she did not want to
endure a “hurtful and hateful primary against me by the president we all fought
for, only to fight and win my election while Republicans will likely lose the
midterms.”
She
added: “I refuse to be a ‘battered wife’ hoping it all goes away and gets
better.”
Her
impending departure will shrink the already slim Republican House majority,
bringing it down to 218 members until her seat in a deep-red district can be
filled.
Ms.
Greene, who arrived in Congress in 2021 as something of a pariah in her own
party, has tried out many different ways of doing the job. She carved out a
singular space on Capitol Hill as part of a growing group of lawmakers at both
extremes of the ideological spectrum who are less interested in legislating and
building up seniority in leadership suites and more interested in influencing
politics from the outside, using social media to troll adversaries, building
brands and stoking outrage.
She
briefly acted as a team player, forging an unlikely alliance with former
Speaker Kevin McCarthy that brought her some internal standing in the
Republican conference and landed her on prime committees that Democrats had
removed her from.
But
throughout her metamorphoses, Ms. Greene has remained deeply frustrated with
her party and with the lack of any change in how Washington works. In her
Friday evening post, she referred to “never-ending personal attacks, death
threats, lawfare and ridiculous slander and lies” that she had endured in the
public eye.
In recent
months, those unpleasant aspects of the job had gotten worse as she challenged
Mr. Trump on a variety of topics, including the release of the Epstein files,
the war in Gaza, regulating artificial intelligence and U.S. involvement in
Iran and Ukraine. She excoriated her own party’s leaders for failing to offer
an alternative to make health coverage affordable, as Democrats pressed to
extend expiring Obamacare subsidies.
It all
marked her newest and most eyebrow-raising chapter: The lawmaker who once
subscribed to QAnon conspiracy theories has in recent months been operating as
a powerful free agent and the rare Republican in Congress willing to break with
Mr. Trump.
But it
was on the Epstein issue that her clash with the president reached its apparent
breaking point.
Ms.
Greene earlier this week spoke on the House floor, from the Democratic side of
the chamber, laying out why she was fighting so hard on an issue that has
animated her voters.
“These
American women aren’t rich, powerful elites,” she said. “These are your average
Americans.”
She
added: “For far too long, Americans have been put last, and they’re sick and
tired of it. This is why they don’t trust Congress. This is why they don’t
trust the government.”
The
sudden and stunning transformation of a MAGA true believer also landed Ms.
Greene in places she would never before have been invited, and earned her
strange, new respect from media outlets and lawmakers who had never before
wanted to associate with her.
She has
been at the table on “The View,” and a somewhat regular face, suddenly, on CNN,
an outlet she once snarled at as part of the mainstream media she despised. It
was during a recent interview on CNN that she apologized for contributing to
the divisive and toxic political climate in America.
A week
ago, Mr. Trump publicly withdrew his support for Ms. Greene, writing on social
media that of late, “all I see ‘Wacky’ Marjorie do is COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN,
COMPLAIN!”
Ms.
Greene appeared to take her colleagues, Republican leaders, and even members of
her staff by surprise with her announcement on a Friday evening before a
holiday week. Speaker Mike Johnson, a longtime political foe whom she tried and
failed to oust from his post last year, did not immediately provide a statement
on her announcement.
“The
House is not big enough for her ambitions or personality,” Stephen K. Bannon,
the former White House official and host of the podcast “War Room,” said in a
text message on Friday night after learning of Ms. Greene’s announcement. “She
had her committee assignments pulled by Pelosi in her first term — and rose to
be a national figure. We haven’t seen or heard the last of M.T.G.”
In the
Friday night post, Ms. Greene said her last day in office would be Jan. 5.
Annie Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times


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