Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, during her time in Congress, was outspoken about wanting to release the Epstein Files and about pushing odd, evidence-free conspiracy theories, whether they involved QAnon or people controlling the weather.
Since resigning her seat in January, Greene has continued to speak out about the Epstein issue, and also about Trump world’s reaction to the release of the files.
In a recent interview with former InfoWars host Owen Shroyer, as cited by Mediaite, Greene has unloaded on Trump’s attitude toward the files.
Interview w/ Marjorie Taylor Greene on the State of MAGA, Epstein Files, Corruption and More. pic.twitter.com/aU5H0GorrV
— Owen Shroyer (@OwenShroyer1776) February 14, 2026
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Trump, the former Congresswoman said in the hearings, “fought the hardest” to block the release of the files.
“Pam Bondi, she serves at the pleasure of the president and his administration and those there are telling her, here’s who you can prosecute, no, don’t do this. I mean, they told her that the Epstein files, that fight to release the Epstein files came directly from president Trump,” Greene said in the interview. “And I know a lot of people have a hard time with that, but that is the truth. He fought the hardest. To stop these files from being released.”
“The only reason that [Trump] signed our bill that we passed in the House was because he had to. It became a massive political problem,” Greene added in the interview. “The biggest political miscalculation in Donald Trump’s career was calling this a hoax, fighting the release of it, and having Mike Johnson, the speaker, refuse to bring the bill to the floor to the point where Thomas Massie, myself, Nancy Mace, Lauren Boebert, actually had to vote with all of the Democrats to get to get it released.”
Bondi, over the weekend, put out a new letter, including a list of names of people “mentioned” in the files, minus any context of why they were mentioned. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), one of the major voices in Congress who pushed to release the files, slammed Bondi for sending out that list.
The DOJ is once again purposefully muddying the waters on who was a predator and who was mentioned in an email.
To have Janis Joplin, who died when Epstein was 17, in the same list as Larry Nassar, who went to prison for the sexual abuse of hundreds of young women and child… https://t.co/kM0toLsitd
— Ro Khanna (@RoKhanna) February 15, 2026
“The DOJ is once again purposefully muddying the waters on who was a predator and who was mentioned in an email,” Khanna said on X. “To have Janis Joplin, who died when Epstein was 17, in the same list as Larry Nassar, who went to prison for the sexual abuse of hundreds of young women and child pornography, with no clarification of how either was mentioned in the files is absurd.”
Photo courtesy of the Political Tribune media library.