Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Panic Reveals GOP Turmoil and Trump’s Sinking Influence

 


Marjorie Taylor Greene Has a Meltdown Over Trump’s Failing Agenda — And Accidentally Admits Republicans Are in Trouble


MAGA Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene appeared to unravel in a recent interview with Steve Bannon, sounding the alarm over the GOP’s bleak outlook and expressing frustration with her party’s inability to deliver on Donald Trump’s promises. “We’re gonna lose the midterms at this rate,” Greene warned — and for once, let’s hope she’s right.

In the interview, Greene blamed fellow Republicans for the lack of progress, telling Bannon, “My advice to the president is simple: stick with the agenda and ignore the people here in Washington that are trying to get you to do something different. And it's the Republicans that are the problem, Steve.”

She admitted the obvious: “We’re not gonna get it done in two years. It's not gonna happen.” Then she pivoted to praising Trump’s so-called accomplishments, which largely exist only in MAGA talking points.

Greene implored Trump to “stick to the program” and claimed the only way to win in 2026 is for Republicans in Congress to push his campaign promises, since “Trump’s not on the ballot in 2026.”

She’s not wrong that the GOP is facing serious electoral peril — driven largely by Trump’s tanking approval ratings and the economic fallout his policies have caused. But Greene’s idea of a solution? More extremism.

Rather than recalibrate, she demanded Trump go even further: “I'm telling you, if you ignore the parents that are furious over COVID vaccines being on their childhood vaccine schedule, you're gonna lose the midterms,” she ranted. She also mentioned promises like “no tax on tips, overtime, and Social Security” — policies that contradict decades of Republican orthodoxy, but sound good in a vacuum.

Greene concluded by warning that campaigning on anti-impeachment rhetoric won’t work: “If we're campaigning in 2026 on ‘you have to vote for Republicans because the Democrats are going to impeach Trump,’ the American people are gonna go, ‘we don’t care, we’ve seen that TV show before.’”

Ironically, her tirade inadvertently made the case for Democrats: Americans are tired of the chaos, the broken promises, and the economic pain. Even many former Trump voters have had enough.

If Democrats retake the House and Senate and move to hold Trump accountable, there's a growing consensus that this time, the country will be firmly behind them.

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