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Former U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Says She Is “Done” Supporting Republican Party

Former U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said she is “done” supporting the Republican Party, joining conservative commentator Tucker Carlson in publicly breaking with the party over its direction.

Greene made the comments in a June 22 post on X, echoing Carlson’s own recent remarks that he would no longer be supporting the Republican Party for the midterm elections. Carlson, who backed President Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election, has been sharply critical of Republicans over foreign policy and the Trump administration’s handling of Iran. Speaking in a recent episode of the podcast “Can’t Be Censored,” Carlson clarified he would not support Democrats either and was unsure what he would do next.

“Tucker is not the only one who is done supporting the Republican Party,” Greene wrote. “There is A LOT of us that are absolutely fed up and will not support a party that betrays its voters and country.”

Like Carlson, Greene did not explicitly say what she would do next politically. She said her frustration with the GOP did not mean she was becoming a Democrat, writing that she was instead “DONE with the America LAST Republican Party.” In a later post, she wrote that she was “way too conservative to be a Democrat and too honest and free thinking to be a Republican,” calling herself “1000% a proud American.”

Greene was first elected to Congress as a Republican in 2020, winning Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, a reliably GOP seat covering the northwestern corner of Georgia. She was reelected in 2022 and 2024 but resigned midway through her third term in January 2026 following a public break with Trump.

That split unfolded over the latter half of 2025 before intensifying in November, when Trump publicly withdrew his support and said he would back a primary challenger against her if she sought reelection. Greene had increasingly pushed back on Trump and Republican leadership on issues that included the handling of files related to Jeffrey Epstein, foreign policy, healthcare policy, and what she saw as a failure to support “America First” priorities.

Greene announced her resignation from Congress soon afterward, stating that she would leave the chamber January 5 to prevent her district from enduring what she called a “hurtful and hateful primary against me by the President we all fought for.”

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