Sometimes political breakups get messy. And when Donald Trump is involved, they tend to get really messy.
At a rally in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on Friday, President Trump went after Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) with both barrels, calling her a "stone cold liberal" and "highly neurotic." The trigger for this meltdown? Apparently Greene got upset that Trump didn't return her phone calls enough.
"I've got a family, I've got to talk to my family too. You can't call a president every single day and when the president doesn't call you back, she goes around saying, 'He doesn't call me back.' I said, 'Marjorie, I just can't call you back, I'm sorry.' And I wouldn't call her back and she goes onto a rant, 'He won't call me back anymore,'" Trump explained at the rally.
This is remarkable because Greene was once one of Trump's most loyal supporters in Congress. But she recently announced her resignation amid escalating tensions with party leadership, criticizing Republicans on issues like affordability, healthcare, and the Epstein Files. She said she was leaving specifically to avoid a "hateful primary" orchestrated by Trump himself.
Trump wasn't done, though. He dubbed Greene "Marjorie Traitor Brown" and accused her of becoming a regular fixture on CNN. He dismissed any notion that her departure showed courage, suggesting that staying and fighting would have been the brave move. He also hinted at endorsing a candidate who could beat her in the polls.
"What the hell happened to her? She must have been a stone cold liberal, she's on CNN now all the time. Can you believe it? And it was only because I couldn't call her back," Trump said.
"Then they talk about how brave she is. No, brave would be to stay and, you know, it's one of those things," he added.
Greene's exit comes as Republican party divisions grow deeper. Her public split with Trump, once her most powerful ally, reveals just how quickly alliances can shift in today's political landscape.




