
In a stunning escalation of internal Republican turmoil, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) has unleashed a torrent of profanity-laced defiance against President Donald Trump’s White House, vowing to force the release of long-buried Jeffrey Epstein files despite dire warnings of political retaliation.
The Georgia firebrand’s rebellion—capped by her blunt admission, “I’m like, ‘[Expletive] you‘” to Trump aides—has propelled a bipartisan discharge petition over the edge, securing the 218 signatures needed to trigger a House floor vote as early as today.
The dramatic breakthrough came hours after Democrat Adelita Grijalva’s victory in Arizona’s special election for the 7th Congressional District, where she immediately inked her name to the petition spearheaded by Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.).
With every House Democrat on board and four rogue Republicans—Greene, Massie, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.)—now in the fold, the measure stands at 218 votes, bypassing Speaker Mike Johnson’s iron grip on the legislative agenda.
The vote, if held, would compel the Justice Department to disgorge all remaining records from Epstein’s depraved sex-trafficking empire, potentially unmasking high-profile enablers long shielded by bureaucratic stonewalling.
A Personal Vendetta Against the Machine
Greene’s revolt traces back to a chilling phone call from a senior West Wing official, who branded her support for the bill a “very hostile act” and dangled threats of primary challenges and social exile from Trumpworld galas.
Unbowed, the former gym owner fired back in a raw interview with The New York Times, recounting her retort: “I told them, ‘You didn’t get me elected.
I do not work for you; I work for my district.'”
She elaborated on the arm-twisting: “We aren’t supposed to just be whipped on our votes because they’re telling us what to do with this scary threat, or saying ‘We’ll primary you,’ or that we won’t get invited to the White House events.
Me personally? I don’t care.”
The expletive? Reserved for the inner circle’s “scary” tactics.
“When I encounter similar tactics from Trump’s team,” Greene seethed, “I’m like, ‘[Expletive] you.’”
Her fury isn’t isolated; it’s the latest salvo in a brewing MAGA schism, where Greene—once Trump’s loudest cheerleader—now positions herself as a scourge against party orthodoxy.
On X, Greene doubled down over the weekend, clarifying her motives amid swirling conspiracy theories: “To be clear… I stand with girls and women who are sexually abused and raped. Period. Every time. At all times.”
She lambasted Democrats for ignoring victims during their tenure—”They could have exposed the entire thing while they had power but never lifted a finger“—while insisting Trump bears no guilt, citing survivor testimonies that he “was the only one that helped the women.”
In a chilling aside, she addressed Epstein’s suspicious 2019 jailhouse death: “I am not suicidal… if something happens to me, I ask you all to find out which foreign government or powerful people would take heinous actions to stop the information from coming out.”
The post, viewed millions of times, has polarized her base: Supporters hail her as a truth-teller (“Kudos! She should ask who snuffed Epstein,” one user cheered), while detractors mock her as a one-trick pony (“Is this all that her constituents elected her to do? Saying ‘F you’ to the White House?”).

Trump’s Backpedal and the Shadow of Epstein
Trump campaigned in 2024 on a vow to rip open the “Epstein files,” teasing bombshells that would torch his foes—chiefly Bill Clinton, a frequent flyer on Epstein’s Lolita Express.
Yet in office, his Justice Department issued a terse memo last month declaring no “client list” exists and affirming Epstein’s suicide, igniting howls from the right.
Trump himself torched the push on Truth Social: “It’s time to end the Democrat Epstein Hoax, and give the Republicans credit for the great, even legendary, job that they are doing.”
The about-face has rekindled scrutiny of Trump’s own Epstein ties: a 2003 birthday card featuring a nude sketch of Melania Knauss (pre-Trump), flights on the jet, and a fresh $20 billion libel suit against The Wall Street Journal over coverage linking him to the financier.
Last week, House Oversight Democrats—leveraging a GOP subpoena—unveiled Epstein estate docs revealing his sit-downs with Trump consigliere Steve Bannon, Prince Andrew, and billionaire Peter Thiel.
Greene, undeterred, has pledged to “read the names of alleged abusers on the House floor” if the files drop, framing it as a “red line” for MAGA faithful.
“If anyone is implicated, then they have the right to clear their name,” she posted, drawing parallels to her own battles against “insurrection” smears.
Broader Cracks in the MAGA Facade
This Epstein dust-up is mere kindling for Greene’s wider war on Trump 2.0.
She’s torched his Iran airstrikes as a betrayal of “America First” isolationism—”I can support the president… while disagreeing on bombing Iran and getting involved in a hot war that Israel started“—and flipped on Ukraine aid after Trump’s reversal.
Her starkest heresy? Labeling Israel’s Gaza operations a “genocide,” complete with a failed amendment to slash $500 million in aid: “You can’t un-see dead children.”
Podcaster Steve Bannon, a Trump oracle, backs her: “From the base’s perspective, Greene is right on every issue.”
Even across the aisle, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), a petition co-sponsor, tips his hat: unexpected respect for her “independence.”
But Greene feels the sting of sabotage—accusing Trump’s machine of tanking her Senate ambitions with “fake polling” in Georgia’s “good old boy” GOP fiefdom.
White House allies, per CNN reporting, are scrambling behind the scenes with Speaker Johnson to quash the vote, fearing a Senate logjam or Trump’s veto.
Missouri’s GOP delegation, for one, has gone radio silent amid the frenzy.
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Also Read: GOP Members Now Believe Trump Is Named First In The Epstein Files
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