Marjorie Taylor Greene may be finished with Congress, but America clearly isn’t finished with her.

Just two days after dramatically exiting Capitol Hill, the woman who spent years torching norms and turbocharging Trumpism strutted into ABC Studios — and The View erupted into its biggest ratings surge in nearly a year.

According to new Nielsen numbers, Greene’s Jan. 7 appearance drew a jaw-dropping 2.75 million viewers, the show’s highest audience since last April. For a daytime talk show, that’s not a bump — that’s a political earthquake.

And it didn’t stop there.

Viewers tuned in expecting fireworks from the once-combative congresswoman who built an entire political persona on shouting matches, conspiracy theories, and scorched-earth loyalty to Donald Trump.

Instead, they got something stranger: a quiet, almost cautious Greene — as though she suddenly realized that, in Trump’s second term, the cameras might be her last safe battlefield.

“She came in like someone who’d practiced being reasonable in the mirror,” one ABC staffer told us. “It was surreal.”

Greene spoke about her high-profile break from Trump last fall — a split that detonated GOP infighting and delighted Democrats who watched the MAGA machine eat its own.

“This wasn’t quitting,” Greene insisted on-air. “It was choosing a new path.”

A former Democratic strategist watching the show texted us mid-episode: “She’s not retiring. She’s repositioning — and doing it right in front of the anti-MAGA audience she used to attack.”

Whether you see her as a political arsonist or a rebranded reality-TV hopeful, one thing is undeniable: Marjorie Taylor Greene drives ratings like a runaway train.

Her November appearance gave The View a noticeable jolt. This one? A full-blown detonation — a 7 percent leap from her last sit-down.

Her presence didn’t just lift the episode. It lifted the entire week.

The View’s weekly audience skyrocketed to 2.61 million, a massive 59 percent surge over the previous week — numbers even ABC insiders privately admit they “haven’t seen in ages outside major political scandals.”

Women 25–54? Up.
Women 18–49? Way up.
Advertisers? Practically doing cartwheels down the hallway.

“Like it or not, Greene is a ratings cheat code,” one ABC executive told us. “You book her, you win the week.”

Fueled by MTG’s appearance, The View obliterated its daytime rivals, burying NBC’s Today Third Hour and locking in its ninth straight season as America’s No. 1 daytime talk show.

For a woman who exited Congress under a cloud of embarrassment, isolation, and political burnout, Greene somehow managed to give her critics — and ABC — the biggest gift imaginable: attention.

Because in the chaos of Trump’s second presidency, where every headline feels like another episode of political reality TV, Greene seems to understand something that many of her fellow Republicans don’t:

If you can’t control Washington…
Control the ratings.

And on that front?

Marjorie Taylor Greene is still winning.


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