Marjorie Taylor Greene Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Marjorie Taylor Greene has been everywhere the past few days—making headlines, stirring controversies, and sparking both bipartisan ire and some unexpected applause. Just yesterday, the big news cycle was dominated by President Donald Trump’s public rebuke of her during a swearing-in ceremony for the new U.S. Ambassador to India. According to The Independent, Trump said he doesn't know what happened to Greene, that “she’s lost her way, I think,” reacting to her mounting criticisms of his foreign policy focus and her claims that regular Americans aren’t benefitting from the administration’s actions on inflation and affordability. Trump even accused Greene of “catering to the other side” after she appeared repeatedly on CNN and last week’s particularly buzzy stop on The View.
Her appearance on The View, previewed heavily on social media and reported by WCIV and others, saw Greene insisting that she hasn't changed politically, but is simply fighting for her rural Georgia constituents and holding her own party accountable. She’s become a rare Republican voice publicly criticizing the GOP’s lack of a health care plan and voicing support for keeping certain Obamacare tax credits, all while labeling the current system a scam and demanding real solutions to rising insurance premiums.
Notably, Greene has recently broken with her party not just on government shutdown tactics—calling out both House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune on social platforms—but also on foreign policy. She made waves for being one of the very few Republicans to question Israeli military actions in Gaza, tweeting in response to a report by the Associated Press about child casualties and stating, “46 children!!! Are these not war crimes?” That criticism drew both applause and outrage across the political spectrum, signaling a willingness to say what most in her party would not.
She’s also been battling a wave of rumors about her supposed 2028 presidential ambitions. When NOTUS published claims that Greene was openly telling people she wanted to run, she shot back immediately on X, calling those stories “baseless” and lambasting the journalists involved. Greene was direct: she wants to get back to work in Congress, pass bills and appropriations, and not fuel gossip.
On the business front, there haven’t been any major new developments—her focus these days has remained squarely on her legislative work, cable news presence, and social media. Her X account is a stream of combative posts about leadership, health care, the Gaza conflict, and those ever-present rumors about her political future. While conservative media circles and figures like Laura Loomer continue to stoke stories of a presidential run, Glenn—who is reportedly dating her—has publicly denied any such intentions, saying “MTG has NO plans to run for President in 2028.”
In sum, Marjorie Taylor Greene is showing herself to be unpredictable, outspoken, and increasingly independent—often feuding with Trump, GOP colleagues, and even crossing expected partisan lines. Whether this signals a genuine ideological shift or just an intensified brand strategy is up for debate. That’s the latest biography flash. Thanks for listening, and if you want to stay up to date with Marjorie Taylor Greene’s ever-evolving story, make sure to subscribe and search “Biography Flash” for more great biographies.
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