Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said on social media this weekend that she did not commit suicide, raising the prospect of “heering action” in response to her support for a measure that would force the release of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein.
“I’m not suicide, nor one of your happiest healthy people,” Green said on a social media platform on Saturday. “With that being said, if something happens to me, I ask everyone to find out which foreign governments or powerful people will take out heinous actions to stop the message from appearing.”
“It’s not just about this but because of the truth I’ve been telling,” she added. “People understand what I’m talking about.”
Georgia’s representative, one of only four Republican House members, signed a discharge petition that would vote on the release of Epstein’s case archives. Last week, Arizona’s Rep. Adelita Grijalva won the 218th supporter. Cross the threshold required for voting.
Although President Trump has long promised transparency in the Epstein case, the White House has worked hard to lobby for the release petition, calling it “very hostile act.”
Green continued to be a staunch supporter of the president, but in the second semester, her party repeatedly broke through his second semester on Epstein’s archives and foreign policy issues, as she discussed in the New York Times published over the weekend.
“I told them, ‘You didn’t get me elected. I don’t work for you; I work for my area.’ “We shouldn’t just whip it with our votes because they tell us how to deal with this horrible threat, or say ‘we’ll be the main you,’ or we won’t be invited to the White House event. ”
Greene, an isolationist, also opposed speaking during Iran’s strike, continuing to arm Ukraine and the United States’ support for Israel’s war in Gaza, which she calls genocide.
Green said in another article on Saturday that her position in Epstein’s archives was “not about annoying competition between political parties or political enemies,” noting that she did not believe Trump himself was associated with Epstein’s crimes.
“I stand with girls and women who are sexually abused and raped. Every time. Always,” she wrote.
She added: “If someone is involved, they have the right to clear their names. Just like millions of Americans do when they mistakenly accusing crimes.”
Green had previously talked about Epstein’s high-powered ties abroad to stifle efforts to deliver justice to his victims.
In a press conference on September 3, she said she would read out the names of the so-called abusers on the House floor if she was given a list.