Marjorie Taylor Greene Came So Close to Getting the Joke
In the politically charged landscape of Washington, D.C., the phrase “getting the joke” has taken on a profound significance, particularly in the context of lobbying and political maneuvering. Jack Abramoff, a notorious lobbyist, famously noted that the political elite often engage in a façade of ideals while pursuing self-interest at the expense of the public. This duality is starkly illustrated by the recent controversies surrounding figures like Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene and Richard Grenell, former director of the Kennedy Center, who has been accused of misusing the institution’s substantial budget for personal gain. While Grenell disputes these claims, they resonate with Abramoff’s observations about the manipulation inherent in Washington’s political theater.
Greene, who rose to prominence in Congress through her embrace of outlandish conspiracy theories—from Pizzagate to QAnon—has long been viewed as a quintessential “non-joke-getter.” Her fervent belief in Trump’s supposed crusade against a global network of pedophiles starkly contrasts with Trump’s own troubling history regarding sexual misconduct. As Greene’s political career progressed, it became evident that her gullibility had limits. After realizing she had been misled, she began to face the consequences of her political alliances, particularly as Trump distanced himself from her. This schism was exacerbated by revelations about Trump’s connections to Jeffrey Epstein, which have led to increasing pressure within the Republican Party for transparency regarding Epstein’s dealings. Greene’s eventual resignation from Congress, timed to secure her pension, underscores her complex relationship with power and profit, revealing a keen awareness of her own interests despite her earlier naiveté.
The unfolding drama within the MAGA movement highlights a broader narrative of manipulation and exploitation. Greene’s departure from the party’s inner circle serves as a cautionary tale about the perils of political loyalty and the harsh realities of Washington’s elite. While she may have initially believed in the sincerity of her conspiracy-laden rhetoric, her eventual disillusionment reflects a critical understanding of the corrupt underpinnings of the political game. Her story, filled with contradictions and opportunism, ultimately sheds light on the disillusionment many Americans face when grappling with the realities of political manipulation. As the joke continues to unfold in the corridors of power, Greene’s journey illustrates the fine line between belief and exploitation, revealing the darker truths that lie beneath the surface of American politics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JM73begEkYQ
When Jack Abramoff dominated Washington lobbying in the 1990s and early 2000s, he observed that there were two kinds of people in town: those who “get the joke” and those who don’t.
Those who got the joke understood that all of the city’s talk of ideas and principles was flimflam to conceal self-enrichment at the public’s expense. Those who didn’t—didn’t.
On the same day that Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned,
The
New York Times
reported
accusations that President Donald Trump’s handpicked director of the Kennedy Center, Richard Grenell, had used the fine-arts institution’s $268 million budget to dole out favors and enrich friends and allies. If the claims—which Grenell disputes—are correct, Abramoff would recognize a fine example of “getting the joke.”
Greene did not get the joke. Elected to Congress in Georgia in 2020, she became one of the loudest voices in American life for
crackpot conspiracy claims
: Pizzagate, QAnon, 9/11 trutherism, and a fantasy that California wildfires might have been caused by
space lasers
controlled by Jewish bankers. She
repeated
2020-election denialism and
promoted
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s propaganda about his war on Ukraine.
For a long time, Greene’s seemingly fathomless gullibility qualified her as a MAGA leader in Congress. But the gullibility actually did have a limit. Sometime after her election, she
began to realize
that she’d been made a fool of.
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]
Of all the ridiculous things Greene believed, perhaps the single most ridiculous was that Trump, of all people on earth, was leading a heroic fight against a
global network of pedophiles
.
Trump has a long and ample record on the sexual abuse of vulnerable people by powerful men. He’s for it. “When you’re a star, they let you do it,” as he explained. He has been
accused
of sexual assault by about two dozen women. One of them won a multimillion-dollar defamation verdict against him after he called her a liar. He boasted to a
radio interviewer
about intentionally walking into the changing room of a teen beauty pageant that he sponsored. He fantasized aloud about dating his daughter. He maintained a close friendship for years with Jeffrey Epstein, knowing full well that the financier liked girls “on the younger side,” as Trump told
New York
magazine in 2002. Even before Trump went into full cover-up mode about Epstein this year, you had to be as thick as a pallet of bricks to imagine that Donald Trump would want justice for sex-abuse victims.
MAGA-world insiders got the joke. They knew that some of their supporters had convinced themselves that the Democratic Party was led by
Satan-worshipping
, child-sacrificing-ritual cannibals. They also understand that any actual investigation of Epstein regarding child abuse had to be shut down, lest it implicate Epstein’s former friend and fellow accused sex offender Donald Trump. MAGA insiders played games with the Epstein story, as J. D. Vance did in a
tweet
during the Joe Biden years: “What possible interest would the US government have in keeping Epstein’s clients secret? Oh …” Vance was tickling the paranoia of the crazy fringe—without committing to any specific action that might be embarrassing to Epstein’s most intimate associates.
The double game was best symbolized by an incident in February 2025. Attorney General Pam Bondi invited 15 right-wing social-media influencers to the White House, where she
distributed
thick, white binders labeled,
The Epstein Files: Phase 1
. The binders in fact
contained
no new material
of significance. Even the influencers themselves
carefully admitted
their disappointment. But what could they do? The joke must go on.
But maintaining the joke became more difficult in the fall of 2025. Even as the FBI and Department of Justice reversed former promises of transparency on the Epstein issue, materials began to leak from the deceased financier’s estate: a birthday greeting to Epstein that
bears Trump’s signature
and features a cartoon image of a naked woman; emails from Epstein himself attesting to his close relationship with Trump—including one that
described
Trump spending hours alone with one of Epstein’s trafficked victims.
Doubts spread among the non-joke-getters. Doubts expressed themselves in murmurings, then in open rebellion. Republican House members joined Democrats in supporting a discharge petition to urge the release of Epstein materials from the DOJ and FBI.
Trump resisted for many weeks. He called the Epstein story a “hoax,” his go-to move for maximally damaging accusations. He endorsed
primary challenges
and
other pressures
against Republicans who persisted on the Epstein trail after had Trump ordered them to stop. The speaker of the House, a close Trump ally,
kept the chamber closed for weeks
to give the president time to push Republican petition signatories to reverse themselves. In the end, it was Trump who
reversed himself
. He had to accept a vote to release the Epstein materials and then look for more subtle ways to continue covering up whatever it is that Trump wants to conceal.
[
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]
But somewhere along the way, Greene’s defection became more radical and permanent. On November 14, Trump
posted
on his social-media platform about his efforts to explain the joke to her:
It seemed to all begin when I sent her a Poll stating that she should not run for Senator, or Governor, she was at 12%, and didn’t have a chance (unless, of course, she had my Endorsement — which she wasn’t about to get!). She has told many people that she is upset that I don’t return her phone calls anymore, but with 219 Congressmen/women, 53 U.S. Senators, 24 Cabinet Members, almost 200 Countries, and an otherwise normal life to lead, I can’t take a ranting Lunatic’s call every day. I understand that wonderful, Conservative people are thinking about primarying Marjorie in her District of Georgia, that they too are fed up with her and her antics and, if the right person runs, they will have my Complete and Unyielding Support.
The joke still eluded Greene. Trump
called her a “traitor” on camera
and shrugged off the death threats she received. Efforts to recruit a primary challenger to her accelerated. As the split widened between Greene and Trump, the embattled congresswoman began to receive friendlier media attention: a
respectful interview on CNN
, a
guest appearance on
The View
.
Gullible as Greene was about crackpot theories and her political associations, she seems to have been clear-eyed about her own direct personal interests. She was one of the most active and successful
stock traders in Congress
, in a number of cases betting for or against companies about which
she likely had advance information
. She
timed her resignation
to take effect two days after her congressional pension vested. She’s
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
only if the cinematic Mr. Smith had returned home to Montana hugely enriched by timely speculations on land holdings near the Boy Ranger camp he championed.
But she never did get the joke on the biggest joke in town, the joke that MAGA is about anything more than manipulation, exploitation, corruption, lust, and cruelty. She seems to have sincerely believed the lies that shrewder players merely mouthed. She gained her own millions without appreciating that her allies were scheming for billions. She balked at the self-abasement before every one of Trump’s whims that is indispensable to MAGA survival and success. Her failure on those scores is her one service to the country—because it helps other Americans, the joke’s ultimate victims, better understand what is happening to them and why.