
Marjorie Taylor Greene Just Dropped A Truth Bomb About The Republican Party
She was pissed about the attack on Iran.
She broke ranks with Republicans and called the crisis in Gaza a "genocide."
And she won't stop talking about how Republicans won't deal with the national debt.
Now, she's talking about breaking up with the Republican Party.
In an interview with the Daily Mail, the Congress member said: "I don't know if the Republican Party is leaving me, or if I'm kind of not relating to Republican Party as much anymore. I don't know which one it is."
She also said: "I think the Republican Party has turned its back on America First and the workers and just regular Americans."
And finally, she criticized the way Republicans treat women: "I think there's other women in our party that are really sick and tired of the way men treat Republican women."
Those anti-GOP quotes are going viral in a tweet by Brian Tyler Cohen:
People in the replies are, like, duh:
"What if she switches parties and becomes a normie dem," one person asked.
"I really never thought i'd see that day she was saying shit like this and uttering the word 'genocide'…" another person said in disbelief.
And then the Lincoln Project invited her to the party: "Welcome to the resistance, Marge."
As this person said, "Trumps presidency is so goddamn bad that it wokeified marjorie taylor green."
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Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hochul hosts Texas lawmakers in Albany, proposes New York redistrict again to counter GOP plans to gain seats
Aug. 5—ALBANY — Gov. Kathleen C. Hochul is opening the door for New York to redraw its congressional district lines, for a third time since 2022, in a Democrat-backed bid to counter plans to add Republican seats in GOP-controlled states. In Texas, GOP lawmakers are forging ahead with a rarely done mid-decade redistricting process, done at the behest of the Trump administration. The map being put up for a vote in Texas would eliminate up to five Democratically held districts, redrawing the map to split up primarily Democratic voting precincts into new, largely Republican districts. Lawmakers were called back to Austin for a vote on the bill to advance the maps, expected to pass in the majority-Republican state legislature, but most of the state's Democratic lawmakers left the state and have denied their chambers the quorum of members necessary to conduct business. Texas Gov. Gregory W. 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"And this will have implications not just in Texas, but for our entire nation and its future." Hochul said that breaking quorum is a legally valid form of resistance that does not break the law. The Texas arrest orders do not allege a specific crime, accusing the legislators of "dereliction of duty." Even after arrest, the lawmakers will only be taken to the state Capitol, and won't be incarcerated after that. Hochul said the new map being proposed in Texas presents a "radical, radical redrawing of the congressional lines that were already adopted," and said the clearly partisan focus of the plan requires a firm response where Democrats can muster one. Redistricting efforts are state-led across the entire nation, and each state has its own approach. While some Democratic-led states keep the basic approach of letting their legislatures draw the maps themselves, others including New York, Illinois and California have adopted nonpartisan systems that assign the drawing of maps to an independent, bipartisan or nonpartisan commission. In New York, that's the Independent Redistricting Commission, formed in 2015 as a result of a state constitutional amendment agreed to by a majority of voters in 2014. The commission, with an equal panel of Republicans and Democrats, is tasked with redrawing the state legislative and congressional district lines after each 10-year federal census. Its first test was in 2021, and it failed to advance bipartisan maps for state legislature or Congress. Lawmakers redrew the maps themselves under the terms of the constitutional amendment, and those maps were tossed by the state's top court, which created the current congressional map with the help of a court-appointed "special master." 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New York Post
4 minutes ago
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Biden ‘Politburo' aide Bruce Reed blames ex-prez's debate fiasco on his stutter
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The Hill
4 minutes ago
- The Hill
Heated Redistricting Battle SPREADS Across The Country: How Did We Get Here?
The congressional redistricting battle is turning up the heat as California and New York are signaling they will move forward with plans to redraw congressional lines as Democrats look to counter the Texas GOP.