Opinion
Michelle
Cottle
The Three
G.O.P. Women Who Broke Trump’s Grip on Congress
Michelle
Cottle
By
Michelle Cottle
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/18/opinion/trump-epstein-greene-boebert-mace.html
Ms.
Cottle writes about national politics for Opinion.
Nov. 18,
2025
Today’s
Republican Party is big on manliness and masculine virtues. The MAGA right in
particular is forever obsessing over who is the biggest, the strongest, the
most fearless among them.
This is
why, watching President Trump’s fight to keep a lid on the Epstein files, I
have been struck, delighted even, that among the vanishingly few Republican
lawmakers with the courage to defy him have been three fire-breathing
congresswomen: Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia
and Nancy Mace of South Carolina.
Love ’em
or hate ’em, these House troublemakers bucked their party leadership, stared
down their president and made possible Tuesday’s vote to compel the
administration to come clean about the web of degeneracy surrounding Jeffrey
Epstein. In the end, all but one Republican joined every Democrat to pass the
Epstein Files Transparency Act. This victory speaks to the value of having
women’s voices, and strength, inside the Republican echo chamber, a place that
can still be tough for women to navigate.
Aside
from Representative Thomas Massie, the Republicans’ chief crusader for Epstein
transparency, Representatives Boebert, Greene and Mace did more than the rest
of their conference combined to keep the heat on Mr. Trump by signing the
discharge petition to force a vote on Mr. Massie’s bill, sponsored with Ro
Khanna, a Democrat. No other Republicans dared cross the president, who, in
characteristic mob-boss fashion, made clear that support for the measure would
be considered a “hostile act.”
True to
his word, Mr. Trump worked to bully the rebels into submission. For months, he
tried a variety of carrots and sticks on Ms. Boebert. His top aides even called
her into the Situation Room for … a friendly chat. He has repeatedly torn into
Ms. Greene, calling her a “traitor” and expressing eagerness to support a
primary challenger against her in next year’s midterms. His toxic tirades have
resulted in Ms. Greene receiving death threats from his followers, she has
said. And, yes, she recognizes the irony, Ms. Greene told CNN.
Subtle
this president is not. But his strong-arm tactics only caused Ms. Boebert to
dig in, those close to her told The Times. Ms. Greene has responded with open
aggression, leaning into her public feud with the president.
“As a
woman I take threats from men seriously. I now have a small understanding of
the fear and pressure the women, who are victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his
cabal, must feel,” she said in a long social media post on Saturday. At a news
conference before the vote on Tuesday featuring several of Mr. Epstein’s
victims, Ms. Greene directly clapped back at the president for calling her a
traitor: “Let me tell you what a traitor is. A traitor is an American that
serves foreign countries and themselves. A patriot is an American that serves
the United States of America, and Americans like the women standing behind me.”
Ouch.
In some
ways, the three Republican women were perfectly positioned to force the Epstein
issue. Ms. Mace loves the media spotlight, has a history of going against her
party’s leadership (just ask Kevin McCarthy, whom she helped oust as speaker)
and, more to the point, has long championed the victims of sexual abuse, a
horror she has talked about enduring herself. Ms. Boebert and Ms. Greene are
some of the House’s rowdiest, most anti-establishment zealots, and while their
ultra-MAGA credentials have led them to stick with Mr. Trump in the past, those
credentials now make it harder for Mr. Trump to dismiss them as faithless RINO
squishes — though Lord knows he’s trying.
A tiny
group of women taking a stand on a sex scandal may seem an awkward fit for a
Republican Party awash in machismo. Girl power or women’s solidarity or
“believing women” has never played all that well within the party. For all
their talk about God-given gender differences, Republicans can be squirrelly
when it comes to gendered political perspectives. For years, I listened to
numerous party players pooh-pooh the very notion of “women’s issues.” More
recently, the emerging view seems to be that the feminization of politics and
culture is destroying America.
And yet.
Women make up only 14 percent of the House Republican conference (about 15
percent if you count nonvoting delegates), but they accounted for 75 percent of
the Republicans who forced Tuesday’s Epstein vote. That math intrigues me.
Sadly,
most of the Republican women in the House lacked the stomach for this fight.
They sat on the sidelines for weeks, letting their more audacious colleagues
absorb the president’s wrath. Then, after Mr. Trump folded and gave the
go-ahead to support the bill, all but one member of the conference rushed to
get on the right side of the vote. (Two members did not cast votes.)
This
spineless opportunism disappointed me more in some lawmakers than in others.
Representative Elise Stefanik, a member of leadership, spent her pre-MAGA years
in Congress striving to make her party more friendly to women. Given that she
recently announced a run for governor of New York, you’d think she’d be looking
for ways to reassure home-state voters that she is indeed more than just a
Trump toady. Throwing her weight behind the Epstein files petition could have
been a prime opportunity. Heavy sigh.
It will
be interesting to see where this fight goes from here. Following the House’s
near-unanimous passage, the Senate was reportedly looking to quickly follow
suit.
This
speaks well of Republican senators’ sense of self-preservation. The G.O.P.’s
pathetic showing in the recent elections suggests voters are growing weary of
Trumpian chaos, corruption and moral degeneracy. Republican lawmakers would be
smart to start distancing themselves from their president’s worst impulses and
excesses, to begin scraping off the layers of moral grime accumulated through
their years of bootlicking.
Mr. Trump
will take such attempts badly. But if Republican lawmakers need any advice on
how to man up and grow a spine, I can think of a few of their female colleagues
in the House they can ask.


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