Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene says she’s had enough — of Washington, of death threats, and of Donald Trump.

The Georgia Republican and longtime MAGA firebrand announced Sunday she will step down from Congress months before her third term ends, citing a flood of death threats that she claims now come from both left and right after her public split with President Trump.

“My office has reported 773 death threats to Capitol Police,” Greene posted on X. “Those were just the ones that came directly into my office — not the countless threats online to myself and my family. We just didn’t have enough people to constantly monitor that.”

Her announcement came after Trump publicly attacked her on Truth Social, mocking her as “Marjorie ‘Traitor’ Green [sic]” and calling her “a disgrace to our GREAT REPUBLICAN PARTY!”

For years, Greene had been one of Trump’s fiercest defenders — a loyal soldier of the “America First” movement who routinely appeared at his rallies and echoed his talking points on cable news.

But that alliance shattered this fall when Greene joined a bipartisan push to declassify all government files related to Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier whose network of powerful associates remains under scrutiny.

“All of the death threats came from the left,” Greene said, “until I stood with the Epstein survivors — women who were raped and trafficked by rich powerful men — and that’s when President Trump turned on me.”

Trump’s fury reportedly erupted after Greene signed a House discharge petition forcing a vote on the so-called Epstein Files Transparency Act, demanding full public release of Epstein’s government connections. According to a recent 60 Minutes interview, Trump “grew furious” with Greene for supporting what he called a “deep state distraction.”

Greene’s post detailed a disturbing wave of harassment — pizza deliveries meant to expose her home address, pipe bomb threats, and even assassination threats against her teenage son.

“I sent these assassination threats on my son to President Trump,” she wrote, “and he responded with harsh accusatory replies and zero sympathy.”

Capitol Police have confirmed they are reviewing multiple complaints from Greene’s office but have not commented on the specifics.

She also took aim at her fellow Republicans, accusing them of caving to Trump’s control.

“A Republican majority that takes orders from the White House is not serving voters,” she wrote. “And an administration that governs only by executive order offers nothing but temporary policies.”

Greene’s experience is not isolated. Threats against members of Congress have skyrocketed since Trump returned to power in January 2025, according to law enforcement briefings shared with senior staff.

In recent months, Democrats and Republicans alike have reported disturbing spikes in violent rhetoric. Senator Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) told NBC News: “We’ve had hundreds, if not close to a thousand, threats this year.” Representative Seth Moulton (D-MA) said his office faced “an extraordinary number of violent and graphic threats” after calling on Trump to denounce political violence.

Even Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer revealed that three of his New York offices were targeted with bomb threats earlier this month.

Greene, first elected in 2020, said she will officially leave office on January 5, 2026. Her seat in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District will be filled through a special election expected next spring.

Political analysts say her resignation marks the most dramatic fracture yet inside Trump’s GOP — and a rare moment when one of his most loyal allies turned her back on him in public.

“Must I stay until I am Charlie Kirk’ed?” Greene wrote, referencing the assassination of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk earlier this year — a chilling reminder of how violence has seeped into American politics.

Whether Greene’s departure sparks further rebellion inside the MAGA ranks remains to be seen. But her message — that the threats are now coming “from both sides” — underscores the dangerous volatility gripping the country under Trump’s second term.

“Regardless of left or right,” she concluded, “death threats and political violence are out of control.”


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