Politics

Greene eyes America-focused third party after GOP exit

Greene eyes – Marjorie Taylor Greene says she’s already “in talks” to launch a “true America-focused” political party, just a week after saying she is ditching the GOP. In an interview on Piers Morgan’s Uncensored on Tuesday, Greene positioned the effort as a challenge to t

Marjorie Taylor Greene didn’t wait long after leaving the GOP to float something bigger: a new party built around what she calls a “true America-focused” agenda.

A week after she announced she was ditching the Republican Party. Greene said she is now “in talks” with others to launch it. She laid out her plan during an interview on Piers Morgan’s Uncensored on Tuesday. speaking in the language of a political outsider who believes the current system is designed to trap anyone who refuses to play along.

“There is a group of us that have literally fought the system. ” Greene said. adding that if they “decide to align. ” they could launch a party that “doesn’t fall into the traps of Democrats and Republicans.” She framed it as an attempt to bring “some serious players from the right and the left” together—without committing to either party’s usual operating assumptions.

Morgan had asked about whether Greene’s ally Tucker Carlson could lead a “splinter version” of the Republican Party. Greene said she had not talked to Carlson about it, but she argued Carlson would pose a “great threat” to the Republican and Democratic elite if he chose to run for office.

When it came to actually building something new, Greene didn’t offer a blueprint so much as insist it’s already in motion. “I am in talks with people and there are serious conversations happening,” she said, “looking at what are the mechanics of that and the reality of it.”

She tried to bring expectations back down to earth. Greene said it would take “a couple of election cycles” for a third party to really establish itself. But she put the heavy lift on voters, not celebrities.

“It’s going to take the American people to get involved,” Greene said. “And so if the American people truly want to give a strong challenge to the failed two-party system of America, then they’re going to have to step up.”

Greene continued by arguing it would not be driven by “a couple of players like Tucker and I and a few others.” Instead, she said, “It’s going to take a serious effort from everyone.”

Her comments land in the middle of a wider high-profile rift among figures who have spent the last year publicly challenging the political establishment—especially around questions of loyalty and foreign influence.

Greene’s remarks follow her announcement last week that she was “DONE” voting for Republicans. She made that decision right after Carlson made the same pledge.

Carlson said, “I would not support the Republican Party. There’s no chance I would support the Republican Party,” and added, “I’m not going to support the Democratic Party — I’m not sure what I’m going to do.”

He then zeroed in on loyalty: “How could I or any American voter support a political party that’s not loyal to the United States. That puts the interests of a foreign country above those of its own citizens. It’s not possible to vote for people like that, and I’m not going to.”

Carlson said he was referring to Israel. He has repeatedly focused on Israel, and he argued Trump’s 2024 campaign was funded largely by people with “loyalty to Israel,” claiming it was now forcing the president to make decisions that are not in the best interest of the USA.

Trump has scoffed at those claims. In March, he said about the Iran war, “If anything, I might’ve forced Israel’s hand.” Earlier this month, he said Israel has “no choice” but to accept whatever deal he cuts with Iran.

Greene, like Carlson, is a former Trump supporter who later became a fierce MAGA critic. Her break with Trump was tied to the files connected to dead sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein—files she said the Trump administration wasn’t working hard enough to release.

Trump called Greene a “traitor” and pulled his support for her, and Greene opted to quit Congress soon after. She said it was necessary because she was facing a “hateful primary” spurred by Trump.

Since leaving the House of Representatives, Greene has continued to bash Trump. Now she says she is working to get a third major political party off the ground—framing it as a new vehicle for voters who, in her view, are fed up with a two-party system that no longer answers to them.

Jason Cohen contributed to this report.

Marjorie Taylor Greene third party GOP Piers Morgan Uncensored Tucker Carlson Donald Trump MAGA Israel Jeffrey Epstein

4 Comments

  1. So she left the GOP and now wants a new party like… next week? Sounds like chaos but maybe people will like it. Also Piers Morgan is doing interview roulette again.

  2. I don’t get it. She says “true America” like that’s a brand name, but then she wants to avoid Democrats and Republicans… so who exactly is she? And didn’t she already have enough attention, why need a whole party? Tucker Carlson “threat” to elites?? That’s the same thing every politician says.

  3. Not to be dramatic but this sounds like a vanity project. “In talks” with people means nothing, right? Like okay so what are the mechanics, does she just mean fundraising and a logo? I saw Tucker mentioned and now everybody’s acting like he’s the leader of some magic third thing, but she literally says she hasn’t talked to him. Typical politics… always “serious conversations” and no actual plan.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Are you human? Please solve:Captcha


Secret Link