U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia resigned from Congress on Friday after publicly breaking with President Trump and accusing him of abandoning his own agenda, according to an NPR interview. Her departure, as one of the most prominent MAGA-aligned lawmakers, is forcing Republicans to confront what their party will look like after Trump leaves the White House, GOP strategists say.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, who went to Congress from Georgia in 2021 and quickly became one of President Trump's loudest supporters as he sought to overturn his 2020 election defeat, resigned from the House on Friday, according to NPR's Morning Edition.
Her comments and embrace of conspiracy theories had at times led fellow Republicans to distance themselves, before she later rose as a flamboyant and influential Trump backer. That made her resignation more striking. In her announcement, Greene said Trump had abandoned his own agenda, a point NPR reporters noted as central to her split with the president.
NPR reports that Greene released an approximately 11-minute video outlining her decision, in which she argued that ordinary Americans are repeatedly failed by both major political parties and by what she described as a broader political system that profits from election cycles rather than delivering results. She also cited personal considerations, including concerns about her family and the toll of public life, though she did not provide extensive detail on those private matters.
The break followed months of rising tension between Greene and Trump, which culminated when the president abruptly cut ties with one of his most outspoken allies, NPR has previously reported. In that earlier coverage, Trump and his advisers cast Greene as disloyal to his political movement after policy and stylistic disputes. The deterioration of their relationship set the stage for her eventual decision to step down.
Greene’s departure further narrows an already slim Republican majority in the House, increasing the pressure on GOP leaders as they try to move legislation and prepare for the next round of national elections, according to NPR’s political desk. Analysts say every vacancy and special election now carries added weight for a party that has struggled to keep its conference unified.
Republican strategists interviewed by NPR say Greene’s exit underscores a broader debate inside the GOP between hard-line Trump-aligned activists and more traditional conservatives over the party’s future direction. Those disputes range from foreign policy and the scope of U.S. involvement overseas to domestic priorities such as health care and government spending.
Alex Conant, a Republican strategist who spoke with NPR in a separate segment about the state of the MAGA movement after Greene’s resignation, said the break highlights the challenge of keeping together a coalition built around Trump’s personal brand as the party begins to contemplate a post-Trump era. He noted that some figures on the right are pushing for a more populist, confrontational approach, while others want to return to a more conventional conservative agenda.
Greene’s prominence and devoted following mean she is unlikely to disappear entirely from Republican politics, strategists told NPR. While there is no clear indication she is preparing a specific future campaign, her resignation and her public criticism of Trump are likely to keep her at the center of debates over what comes next for the GOP.