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Marjorie Taylor Greene receiving death threats post resignation

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who is pushing for more transparency from the Trump administration about Jeffrey Epstein, speaks to reporters alongside some of the convicted sex offender’s accusers, Sept. 3, 2025.

(NewsNation) — Just weeks after announcing her resignation from Congress, Marjorie Taylor Greene says she’s been receiving death threats.

The Georgia Republican, who is set to leave office on Jan. 5, took to her X account saying, “My office has reported 773 death threats to Capitol Police, but those were just the threats that came directly into my office via call or email, and don’t include the countless threats online to myself and my family members. We just didn’t have enough people to constantly monitor that.”


“These 773 death threats do not include all of the dozens of swatting calls to myself and my family members and pizza doxxings,” Greene also said.

Greene had previously been in a public feud with President Trump after having been a staunch ally of the commander-in-chief and his “Make America Great Again” movement. She voiced her concerns over Trump’s handling on economic issues and the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.

Greene also predicted the GOP, which currently controls the White House and Congress, will lose its grip next year amid political stumbles by Trump. The feud had gotten so hostile, Greene even apologized for taking part in what she deemed “toxic politics.”

“It’s been something I’ve thought about a lot, especially since Charlie Kirk was assassinated,” she said. “I’m only responsible for myself and my own words and actions, and I’m committed—and I’ve been working on this a lot lately—to put down the knives in politics.”

Greene took office on Jan. 3, 2021, and will have served for five years and three days by the time she exits.