Four Simple Questions for Marjorie Taylor Greene
In a surprising turn of events, Marjorie Taylor Greene, the controversial Georgia representative, has sparked discussions about her evolving political stance following a recent appearance on *The View*. During the show, Greene engaged in a surprisingly cordial dialogue, leading some critics, including Sunny Hostin, to express their astonishment at her seemingly transformed demeanor. Greene has recently voiced her dissent against the GOP’s strategies, particularly criticizing their approach to government shutdowns, healthcare costs, and the lack of transparency regarding the Jeffrey Epstein files. This shift has intrigued liberal commentators and media outlets, who are now questioning whether Greene is genuinely changing her tune or merely adopting a more palatable public persona as she considers higher political ambitions, including potential runs for governor, Senate, or even the presidency.
Despite the softer media treatment, Greene’s history of incendiary comments and conspiracy theories remains a significant concern. While she has attempted to distance herself from her past affiliations, including disavowing the QAnon conspiracy theory and minimizing her previous claims about Jewish space lasers, her explanations often come across as evasive. For instance, Greene has repeatedly denied the legitimacy of the 2020 election results, a stance she maintained even during the Capitol riots on January 6, 2021. Furthermore, her past associations with figures like Nick Fuentes, a known white nationalist, and her controversial remarks regarding the COVID-19 vaccine and Israel’s role in recent conflicts, suggest a persistent pattern of extremism rather than a genuine ideological shift. Critics argue that these inconsistencies highlight a troubling inability to separate partisan fantasy from reality, raising questions about her true motivations and the authenticity of her recent public appearances.
As Greene continues to navigate her political landscape, the media and public must hold her accountable by asking the hard questions she has largely avoided. While some may hope for a genuine evolution in her views, the evidence suggests that her past actions and statements cannot be easily dismissed or overlooked. Whether Greene is truly changing or simply adapting her rhetoric for political gain remains to be seen, but it is crucial for her future discourse to be scrutinized rigorously. Her significant following and aspirations for greater power necessitate a thorough examination of her beliefs and actions, ensuring that any potential evolution is grounded in accountability rather than opportunism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rz_bzM7LYno
Marjorie Taylor Greeneâs critics are starting to think they got her all wrong. âYou are a very different person than I thought you were,â
The View
âs Sunny Hostin marveled last week, when the Georgia representative joined the show for a largely genial discussion. Recently, Greene has criticized the GOPâs shutdown strategy, lack of a plan to address health-care costs, and refusal to release the Jeffrey Epstein files. This turnabout has excited some liberals and media outlets, sometimes to the point of credulity.
Greene sits on the potent House Oversight and Homeland Security Committees. She has
openly entertained
runs for higher office, including for governor and Senate, and was recently
reported
to be pursuing the presidency. (She denied it.) Yet watching the softball sit-downs with her on TV, one gets the sense that Greene is being treated as a curiosity rather than as one of the most powerful people in the country, seeking even more influence.
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On the few occasions when she has been confronted with her past positions and incendiary assertions, Greene has deflected or pleaded ignorance. On
The View
, she
disavowed
the QAnon conspiracy theory, sayingâas she has beforeâthat she was misled by âmedia lies and stuff you read on social media.â On
Real Time With Bill Maher
, Greene
noted
that she never said that any wildfires were caused by a âJewishâ space laser, as some outlets reported. She merely tied such fire-starting technology to the Rothschild banking dynasty, a Jewish family that has been subject to countless anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. âI didnât even know the Rothschilds were Jewish,â Greene explained with an aw-shucks shrug. âBefore politics, I didnât know much of any of this stuff.â
Fair enough. Greene was but a tender 44 years old when she invoked the Rothschildsâthe same age she was when she
liked
a social-media comment saying that âa bullet to the head would be quickerâ for getting rid of thenâHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She was practically a childâ43âwhen she
mused
about executing Hillary Clinton and former President Barack Obama. But youthful ignorance doesnât explain every conspiracy theory that Greene has advanced, and every bigot she has embraced,
since
she entered politics. Because some interlocutors appear to find interrogating her challenging, I thought Iâd suggest some lines of inquiry for Greeneâs next media appearance. You might say Iâm just asking questions.
Did Donald Trump win the 2020 election?
This week, the president
pardoned
a group of Republican activists who had acted as fraudulent electors in an attempt to overturn his 2020 loss. Greene not only
applauded
this decisionâshe called for more. This stance is nothing new. For years, Greene has denied the 2020 election results and spread false claims about the contest and its aftermath. âToday Iâll be objecting to a stolen election,â she
declared
on January 6, 2021, shortly before rioters stormed the Capitol and attempted to steal the election for Trump. In 2022, Greene
insisted
that âantifa,â not Trump supporters, was behind that abortive insurrection. In 2023, when House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries observed that Joe Biden had won the 2020 presidential election, Greene
yelled back
, âNo, he didnât.â In 2024, she spread a
baseless rumor
that Georgia voting machines were surreptitiously altering early votes. She has not disavowed any of these assertions.
Does Greene have any ideological differences with American white nationalists?
Last month, Tucker Carlson, one of the most influential voices on the American right,
hosted Nick Fuentes
, one of the countryâs most notorious white nationalists, on his podcast. Their conversation kicked off an intra-conservative controversy over the place of anti-Semitism and Nazi apologism in the MAGA movement. But long before Fuentes joined Carlson, Greene joined Fuentes. In February 2022, she
spoke
at the America First Political Action Conference, an event organized by Fuentes, where she grinningly
shook hands
with him onstage. Later, Greene claimed to be unaware of his views and
said
that she was ânot aligned with anything that may be controversial,â without explaining how she, a professional politician, had come to give an address at a racist-run gathering without knowing what she was walking into. Eight months later, under media pressure, Greene
declared
on social media, âOf course I denounce Nick Fuentes and his racists [
sic
] anti-semitic ideologyâ (she went on to blame the media for being âobsessedâ with him).
More recent events suggest that Greeneâs disavowal might not have been entirely genuine. âI was a friend of hers, and she spoke at my conference, and then the day after, she pretended like she didnât know me,â Fuentes
told
Carlson. âShe knew exactly what it was.â Days after Carlson hosted Fuentes for that amiable exchange, in which the far-right influencer also praised Joseph Stalin and railed against âorganized Jewry,â Greene
slammed
not Fuentes, but those criticizing âmy good friend Tucker Carlson.â Given that Greene had been Carlsonâs guest the week before Fuentes, this defense is not surprising. But it poses a question: Does Greene agree with either Fuentes or Carlson about
Hitler
,
Black people
,
women
, and
the rest
? Undoubtedly, she believes in the two menâs right to free speech, but will she ever use hers to criticize their specific ideas? Someone should ask.
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Did the COVID vaccine kill âextremely high amountsâ of people?
In a November 2021 social-media thread, Greene approvingly
cited
Louis Farrakhan, the reactionary Black hate preacher known for his homophobic rhetoric and anti-Semitic rants about the âsynagogue of Satan.â The reason? Farrakhan and his Nation of Islam organization are avowedly anti-vaccineâFarrakhan once
claimed
that the H1N1 flu vaccine was developed to kill peopleâand accordingly opposed the COVID-19 vaccines. âExtremely high amounts of deaths are reported on VAERS,â the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, âbut there are no investigations into those deaths,â Greene
claimed
in that series of posts,
misrepresenting
the meaning of the VAERS systemâs data. The merits of vaccine mandates are a matter of opinion. Whether large numbers of people were murdered by the COVID vaccine, only for their deaths to be covered up, is a question of factâone Greene ought to be able to answer with proof, especially given her position on the House Oversight Committee.
Did Israel let the October 7, 2023, attacks happen?
Many people in Congress and beyond have criticized Israelâs conduct in Gaza,
myself included
. But Greene has gone much further. When the conflict began, she initially sided with Israel and attempted to exploit the Hamas assault to
censure
the Muslim representative Rashida Tlaib for âantisemitic activityâ and âsympathizing with terrorist organizations.â But since then, Greene has not only reversed course but begun insinuating something far worse than anything Tlaib ever articulated: that Israel knew about the October 7 plot in advance, yet did nothing to stop the attack.
In September, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that Israeli intelligence had hijacked phones in Gaza to stream his address to the United Nations. At the time,
journalists
on the ground
reported
that they found no evidence that this had actually occurred. Nonetheless, the commentator Glenn Greenwald asked: âIsrael has such complete surveillance and control of Gazaâs communications networks that it can commandeer them to force their phones to broadcast Netanyahuâs speech, but Israel had no clue that Hamas was planning an operation as large as Oct 7 and it then took hours to respond?â There are very straightforward,
nonconspiratorial reasons
Israel failed to repel the 2023 Hamas attack, but this did not stop Greene from
reposting
Greenwaldâs claim with an eyeballs emoji. (Greene has also
repeatedly
implied
that Israel had a hand in assassinating President John F. Kennedy.)
A handful of recent apostasies from her party does not negate Greeneâs lifetime of conspiracies. Taken together, the above positions do not suggest a stable person of sound judgment. Rather, they paint a picture of someone consistently unable to distinguish partisan fantasy from reality, who ping-pongs from conspiratorial extreme to conspiratorial extreme. âEverybodyâs like, âMarjorie Taylor Greene has changed,ââ she
said
of herself on
The View
. âOh no, nothing has changed about me.â
Peopleâeven politiciansâshould be
allowed to grow
and not be forever reduced to the worst version of themselves. But there is a difference between an honest evolution, which entails
accountability
, and shallow opportunism, which offers none. Which category does Greene fall into? Given her significant following and stated political ambitions, itâs in everyoneâs best interest to find out. But for that to happen, her interlocutors will have to start asking her the hard questions sheâs thus far avoided.