As House Republicans try to move past the rifts demonstrated during their three-week speakership quagmire, one person has emerged from the drama with few allies and plenty of enemies: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

Greene was a close ally of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). And with McCarthy out of power—and Greene largely ostracized from her former friends in the House Freedom Caucus, as well as the GOP rank-and-file who already disliked her—there aren’t many House Republicans standing with the conservative Facebook-shock-jock-turned-congresswoman.

Greene’s diminished status in the GOP conference was on full display last week, as she introduced a resolution to chastise Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) for her pro-Palestinian rhetoric and lost the vote badly.

Twenty-three Republicans broke with Greene on her resolution to censure Tlaib, even though the Democratic congresswoman has repeatedly put her foot in her mouth over the war in the Gaza Strip.

And those 23 Republicans breaking with Greene—a firebrand conservative who is perhaps the id of the MAGA movement in Congress and has Donald Trump on speed dial—is just the latest evidence that GOP members are neither fearing nor loving Marjorie Taylor Greene.

That point was further illustrated after the vote, when Greene took to Twitter to shame the Republicans who voted against her censure resolution.

“You voted to kick me out of the freedom caucus, but keep CNN wannabe Ken Buck and vaping groping Lauren Boebert and you voted with the Democrats to protect Terrorist Tlaib,” Greene wrote, taking aim at Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX). “You hate Trump, certified Biden’s election, and could care less about J6 defendants being persecuted.”

Rather than just letting her shot go, Roy responded by telling a reporter from The Hill: “Tell her to focus on chasing so-called Jewish space lasers if she wishes to spend her time on such matters.”

That didn’t go over well with Greene.

“Oh shut up Colonel Sanders, you’re not even from Texas, more like the DMV,” she replied.

Greene has never been one to shy away from an online battle. It’s part of the reason she has gained such MAGA infamy. But Greene’s fellow GOP members, many of whom once considered themselves her ally, suggested to The Daily Beast that her antics are only making her standing in Congress weaker.

“Childish in many ways,” Rep. Troy Nehls (R-TX) said of Greene’s attacks. “Does he look like Colonel Sanders? I don’t know how beneficial that is to start attacking other conservatives.”

Nehls, a fellow Trump cheerleader, notably came to Greene’s aid in 2021 when she faced an effort to boot Greene from her committee assignments. But now, he’s questioning her tactics of attacking conservatives.

“What do you feel you’re accomplishing there, you know?” Nehls said. “Chip’s a pretty conservative guy… What do you feel you are personally gaining from that?”

Some Republicans did try to minimize the feud. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN), ever one to find the folksy bright side of any issue, compared the disagreement between Greene and Roy to a “fight at Christmas time or Thanksgiving.”

“You know, family at the table,” Burchett said. “You try to not set the two together.”

But other close Trump allies acknowledged that Greene was doing herself no favors.

When The Daily Beast asked Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) if he thought Greene was losing friends in Congress after the latest dust-up, he was clear the answer was yes.

“Yeah. Is she concerned about that? I don’t think so,” he said.

“The airing of grievances by Twitter, or by X, is just not productive,” Donalds continued. “When you do it through social media, it just doesn’t work.”

After Greene’s back and forth with Roy, Donalds spoke privately with Roy and Boebert. But notably, as of Friday afternoon, he had not spoken with Greene herself.

“Honestly, I joked with him and said, ‘Hey man, let me get a three-piece,’ Donalds said of his conversation with Roy, whose white-goatee has a bit of the flavor of Sanders’ 11 secret herbs and spices.

For Roy’s part, when questioned by The Daily Beast about where his relationship with Greene now sits, he directed the questions back to Greene. (He also said that he “loves” fried chicken.)

As for Donalds’ conversation with Boebert, according to a Republican lawmaker familiar with the conversation, the Colorado Republican downplayed the most recent attack against her by Greene.

“I don’t even want to deal with this,” Boebert said, according to a Republican member who heard the remark.

Other Greene allies also attempted to stay out of the fray, including Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), who declined to comment, as well as Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-MT), who said he tries to “stay out of it.”

“You know I tend to ignore such distractions,” Zinke said.

But Greene’s confrontational style appears to be getting worse, not better.

As The Daily Beast reported back in January, Greene had a fiery dispute with Boebert in the women’s restroom at the start of Congress, which months later eventually escalated into a heated confrontation over waring impeachment bills of President Joe Biden.

Their spat culminated in Greene calling Boebert a “little bitch” on the House floor.

While Greene appears to be losing friends in Congress, she still has plenty of allies in Trumpworld. As The Daily Beast reported in January, Greene’s name has been, and since remained, on an informal vice president shortlist.

“Trumpworld loves our dear MTG,” one Trump adviser said.

“She’s the most loyal soldier in Congress and has been there since day one,” a Trumpworld operative said. “She is often his mouthpiece.”

When asked for comment, Greene told The Daily Beast she wasn’t interested in speaking with a “stupid gossip blog.”

QOSHE - Marjorie Taylor Greene Shows Congress How to Lose Friends and Not Influence People - Zachary Petrizzo
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Marjorie Taylor Greene Shows Congress How to Lose Friends and Not Influence People

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07.11.2023

As House Republicans try to move past the rifts demonstrated during their three-week speakership quagmire, one person has emerged from the drama with few allies and plenty of enemies: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

Greene was a close ally of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). And with McCarthy out of power—and Greene largely ostracized from her former friends in the House Freedom Caucus, as well as the GOP rank-and-file who already disliked her—there aren’t many House Republicans standing with the conservative Facebook-shock-jock-turned-congresswoman.

Greene’s diminished status in the GOP conference was on full display last week, as she introduced a resolution to chastise Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) for her pro-Palestinian rhetoric and lost the vote badly.

Twenty-three Republicans broke with Greene on her resolution to censure Tlaib, even though the Democratic congresswoman has repeatedly put her foot in her mouth over the war in the Gaza Strip.

And those 23 Republicans breaking with Greene—a firebrand conservative who is perhaps the id of the MAGA movement in Congress and has Donald Trump on speed dial—is just the latest evidence that GOP members are neither fearing nor loving Marjorie Taylor Greene.

That point was further illustrated after the vote, when Greene took to Twitter to shame the Republicans who voted against her censure resolution.

“You voted to kick me out of the freedom caucus, but keep CNN........

© The Daily Beast


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