Former firebrand Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene says she was abandoned—and targeted—by the very political movement she helped build.
In a shocking new interview following her resignation from Congress, Greene alleges that President Donald Trump privately delivered an “extremely unkind” message after a MAGA-fueled backlash that included pipe bomb threats at her home and death threats against her son.
Once one of Trump’s fiercest defenders on Capitol Hill, Greene says the relationship turned toxic when she publicly challenged the GOP establishment and began pushing for the release of the full Epstein files—a move that, according to her, ruffled feathers at the highest levels.
“After President Trump called me a traitor, I got a pipe bomb threat at my house,” Greene revealed. “And then I got several direct death threats on my son. The email subject lines literally said ‘Marjorie Traitor Greene.’”
Though law enforcement never directly linked the threats to Trump or his team, Greene insisted the violent rhetoric was “directly fueled by the president himself.”
According to Greene, she reached out privately to both President Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance after receiving the threats.
While Vance allegedly gave her a brief, “We’ll look into it,” Greene said Trump’s response “wasn’t very nice.”
When asked to elaborate, she paused. “It was extremely unkind. But I won’t go into the details of that conversation out of respect for the office. I took the high road.”
In a blistering rebuke of her GOP colleagues, Greene accused many Republicans of privately mocking Trump, only to flip once he secured the nomination.
“I watched them laugh at him behind closed doors—how he talks, how he acts. And then, suddenly, they were all kissing his a– when he won the primary. MAGA hat on, smile plastered, zero backbone,” she said.
Greene formally stepped down from her seat in late November, ending her tumultuous tenure in Congress.
“Washington, D.C. always despised me,” she said. “I never fit in with the cocktail class. But I never thought it would be the president I defended who’d turn on me.”
She said the final straw wasn’t the name-calling—but the effect it had on her family.
“I have too much self-respect and love my family too much to force them through a primary battle against the very president we all fought for,” Greene said in her resignation message. “It’s not worth it when Republicans are likely to lose the midterms anyway.”
Greene warned that if she, one of the original MAGA warriors, could be discarded, so could the working-class Americans who fueled Trump’s political rise.
“If MAGA Inc. has cast me aside, then they’ve cast aside millions of common Americans who believed in this movement,” she said. “People who didn’t go to Harvard or get invited to Mar-a-Lago dinners.”
In a final statement to supporters, Greene turned her focus to the long game.
“When the common people finally understand that the Political Industrial Complex—on both sides—is ripping this nation apart, they’ll realize their true power. And I’ll be waiting, ready to rebuild it with them.”
“For now, I’m going home. Back to my family, back to the people I love. Life’s too short to keep fighting a machine that doesn’t want to be fixed.”
Elected in 2020 and re-elected twice, Greene was once a darling of the Trump base, known for her no-nonsense style, border hawk stance, and relentless pursuit of Biden-era corruption.
But after clashing with party leadership over Ukraine aid, vaccine mandates, and Epstein-related documents, she found herself increasingly isolated—even within MAGA circles.
By 2025, her populist firebrand politics had become too much for even Trump loyalists, who viewed her defiance as disloyalty.
Now, she says, the movement she once gave everything to has turned its back.
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That’s TRUMP!! More threats when he doesn’t agree with the truth