Former Trump Ally Issues Ominous Warning About President’s Plans — It ‘INSANE’

Marjorie Taylor Greene agreed with a post saying that Donald Trump could declare an emergency and try to cancel elections.


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Former Donald Trump loyalist Marjorie Taylor Greene broke with the president last year and has since resigned her seat in Congress. But Greene hasn’t disappeared and has continued criticizing the president.

Unlike many former Trump backers, who spent a lot of time arguing that Trump was the candidate of peace and that it was his opponents who would take the nation to war, Greene has not backed down and instead continued to criticize the president since the launch of the Iran operation.

“We said ‘No More Foreign Wars, No More Regime Change!,’ Greene said in an X post. “We said it on rally stage after rally stage, speech after speech. Trump, Vance, basically the entire admin campaigned on it and promised to put America FIRST and Make America Great Again.”

This was especially the case this weekend, when the first U.S. casualties from the mission were announced.

“My God, these poor military members and their poor families. I’m sorry for them and praying for them,” Greene wrote on X, as she shared the CENTCOM announcement of the deaths. “This was absolutely unnecessary and is unacceptable. Trump, Vance, Tulsi, and all of us campaigned on no more foreign wars and regime change. Now, America soldiers are dead.”

Also over the weekend, Greene agreed with a post by someone who suggested that Trump might use the war to declare an “emergency” to cancel midterm elections. “Yeah I could see it,” Greene wrote. “INSANE.”

This is likely a case of Greene, a longtime conspiracy theorist, keeping up her conspiracism in the service of the anti-Trump cause. There are very few scenarios in which it would be possible for Trump to cancel midterm elections, and if he did, he would likely find himself blocked from doing so.

Photo courtesy of the Political Tribune media library. 


Stephen Silver
Stephen Silver is an award-winning journalist, essayist and film critic, and contributor to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Broad Street Review and Splice Today. The co-founder of the Philadelphia Film Critics Circle, Stephen lives in suburban Philadelphia with his wife and two sons. Stephen has authored thousands of articles that focus on politics, technology, and the economy.

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