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Marjorie Taylor Greene Resigns from Congress: Explosive Timeline of Trump Feud and What It Means for GOP’s Slim Majority

Washington, D.C. – November 24, 2025 – In a bombshell that has Republican insiders scrambling and MAGA loyalists reeling, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) announced her abrupt resignation from Congress effective January 5, 2026 – just days before the new session kicks off. The firebrand lawmaker, once Trump’s fiercest defender in the House, cited a brutal fallout with the president over everything from Jeffrey Epstein files to U.S. foreign policy as the final straw. Her exit narrows the GOP’s razor-thin House majority to a precarious one-seat edge, raising alarms about gridlock in the 119th Congress and potential midterm bloodbaths in 2026.

Greene’s departure caps five chaotic years in D.C., where she went from QAnon-adjacent provocateur to brief House Freedom Caucus darling, only to torch bridges with the man she helped elect. Georgia voters in her deep-red 14th District – a swath of Bible Belt conservatives from Chattanooga’s outskirts to the Appalachian foothills – are standing by their congresswoman, praising her “America First” spine even as Trump brands her a “traitor.” Polls show her approval hovering at 68% locally, per a fresh Atlanta Journal-Constitution survey, but nationally? She’s radioactive.

As whispers of a 2028 presidential bid swirl (which Greene shot down Sunday on X), here’s the straight-shot timeline of how America’s most polarizing pol imploded – and why it’s a wake-up call for a fracturing Republican Party.

Timeline: From Trump Ally to ‘Lowlife’ Label – How the Greene Meltdown Unfolded

Early November 2025: Cracks Emerge Over Foreign Policy Firestorms

Mid-November: Epstein Files Ignite the Powder Keg

The Breaking Point: Resignation and Retaliation

Today, November 24: Ripples Hit D.C. and Georgia

Why This Blows Up the GOP – And What Comes Next for American Politics

Greene’s bolt isn’t just personal drama; it’s a seismic shift in a House where Republicans cling to a 219-215 edge (now 218-215 post-resignation). With midterms looming, her seat could tip the scales – especially in a district that’s 75% white, evangelical, and Trump +25 in ’24. Analysts at the Cook Political Report bump GA-14 to “Lean R,” warning of a “MAGA civil war” if Trump meddles in the primary.

For Trumpworld, it’s a gut punch. Greene was the rally hype woman, the one who heckled Biden and pushed “America First” harder than most. Her gripes – Epstein transparency, ditching foreign entanglements, fixing Obamacare scraps – echo the Rust Belt voters who flipped Pennsylvania and Michigan. As Forbes puts it, “She went bad? Nah, the party’s gone squishy.”

Georgia feels the quake too. From Dalton’s carpet mills to Cartersville’s chicken plants, folks like trucker Billy Hargrove tell CBS Atlanta: “MTG fought for us when D.C. forgot. Trump’s lost his way.” Her pension play – resigning post-vesting – draws side-eye from fiscal hawks at NTU, but locals shrug: “She earned it battling the swamp.”

As for 2028? Greene’s denial rings hollow amid the buzz. Time reports allies say she’s “got the fire” for a primary run, donor Rolodex in hand. But with Trump eyeing an FDR-style third term (despite the 22nd Amendment chatter), her path’s blocked. Will she launch a podcast empire like Tucker Carlson? Back a DeSantis-Vivek ticket? Or just grill steaks at her WACO gun range?

One thing’s clear: In Trump’s America, loyalty’s a one-way street. Greene’s resignation isn’t an end – it’s the spark for the next GOP reckoning. Stay tuned as special election filings drop this week. What do you think – traitor or truth-teller? Drop your take in the comments.

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