Marjorie Taylor Greene Blasts Laura Loomer as Rift Deepens Within Trump’s Political Circle

This week, former Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene publicly slammed far-right activist Laura Loomer in a heated online argument, highlighting widening political differences ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
Greene, previously one of Trump’s closest congressional allies, slammed Loomer when he stated he would oppose Trump rather than back Republicans in the coming election cycle. On social media platform X, Greene expressed sarcastic and frustrated comments.
Greene apologized for urging Trump and his senior staff to avoid Loomer. She accused Loomer of inciting party divisions with loyalty tests. Greene mockingly called Loomer Trump’s “most loyal worshipper” and suggested she should be Republican National Committee chair or White House chief of staff. She called Loomer’s denial of White House press credentials a “outrage.”
The comments followed Loomer’s accusation that Greene wanted Republicans to lose Congress in 2026. Greene called Trump’s labeling of her a “traitor” a “badge of honor.” Loomer followed up.
The political conflict continued. Trump was asked about his forthcoming visit to Rome, Georgia, where Greene represented until leaving office in January, while speaking to reporters on Air Force One. Trump said that numerous contenders want to replace Greene and that his backing would certainly decide the winner. He called her “Marjorie ‘traitor’ Greene” during the conversation.
Greene soon commented online that she is “not in his cult” and that she refused to conceal up Jeffrey Epstein’s paperwork to protect powerful people. Her comments highlighted Epstein file handling and release scandal.
The U.S. Department of Justice has confirmed the release of 3.5 million Epstein-related papers since December. This release followed public and political pressure to release more records.
Greene also complained on the podcast “Tomi Lahren Is Fearless” that the Trump administration’s Epstein file handling caused her to leave politics. Greene said Republicans wasted a chance to unite without Democratic assistance. Instead, she argued the issue was mishandled, fracturing MAGA and weakening independent voter support.
Greene resigned Congress on January 5 after a public fight with Trump on social media and interviews. She and three other Republican legislators filed a discharge petition to force a House floor vote on Epstein-related documents, escalating the debate. Trump denounced her behavior and backed a district primary candidate.
Greene and Loomer’s heated rhetoric exposes Republican base concerns ahead of a crucial November election. Conservative leaders appear to be debating allegiance, strategy, and high-profile controversies.
The public feud between Greene and Loomer reflects broader splits inside Trump-aligned circles, which might affect candidate endorsements, voter enthusiasm, and party unity in the months ahead.


