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Marjorie Taylor Greene announces resignation after fallout with Trump

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, R-Ga., presides over a House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency hearing on Capitol Hill, Feb. 12, 2025, in Washington.

Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene – a once-loyal supporter of US President Donald Trump who has become a critic – has announced she is resigning from Congress in January.

In a more than 10-minute video posted online on Friday (local time), Greene explained her decision and said she’s "always been despised in Washington, DC, and just never fit in".

Greene’s resignation followed a public fallout with Trump in recent months, as the congresswoman criticised him for his stance on files related to Jeffrey Epstein, along with foreign policy and health care.

Trump branded her a “traitor” and “wacky” and said he would endorse a challenger against her when she ran for re-election next year.

Greene said her last day would be January 5, 2026.

The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment Friday night.

Greene was one of the most vocal and visible supporters of Trump's Make America Great Again politics, and embraced some of his unapologetic political style.

Her break with him was a notable fissure in his grip over conservatives, particularly his most ardent base. But her decision to step down in the face of his opposition put her on the same track as many of the more moderate establishment Republicans before her who went crosswise with Trump.

Greene had been closely tied to the Republican president since she launched her political career five years ago.

In her video Friday, she underscored her long-time loyalty to Trump except on a few issues, and said it was "unfair and wrong" that he attacked her for disagreeing.

"Loyalty should be a two-way street and we should be able to vote our conscience and represent our district's interest, because our job title is literally 'representative,'" she said.

Greene swept to office at the forefront of Trump's MAGA movement and swiftly became a lightning rod on Capitol Hill for her often beyond-mainstream views.

As she embraced the QAnon conspiracy theory and appeared with white supremacists, Greene was opposed by party leaders but welcomed by Trump. He called her "a real WINNER".

Yet over time, she proved a deft legislator, having aligned herself with then-GOP leader Kevin McCarthy, who would go on to become House speaker. She was a trusted voice on the right flank, until McCarthy was ousted in 2023.

While there has been an onslaught of lawmakers from both parties heading for the exits ahead of next fall's midterm elections, as the House struggles through an often chaotic session, Greene's announced retirement will ripple throughout the ranks – and raise questions about her next moves.

Greene was first elected to the House in 2020. She initially planned to run in a competitive district in northern Atlanta's suburbs, but relocated to the much more conservative 14th District in Georgia's northwest corner.

She showed a penchant for harsh rhetoric and conspiracy theories even before her election, suggesting a 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas was a coordinated attack to spur support for new gun restrictions. In 2018, she endorsed the idea that the US government perpetrated the attacks on September 11, 2001, and mused that a "so-called" plane had hit the Pentagon.

Greene argued in 2019 that Representatives Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., both Muslim women, weren't "official" members of Congress because they used Qurans rather than Bibles in their swearing-in ceremonies.

Greene was once a sympathiser with QAnon, an online network that believes a global cabal of Satan-worshipping cannibals, including US government leaders, operates a child sex trafficking ring. She eventually distanced herself, saying she got "sucked into some of the things I had seen on the internet".

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