
Outgoing MAGA Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) revealed the moment she decided she could no longer support President DonaldTrump in an interview on Sunday.
Greene, who is retiring from Congress in January 2026, has become one of Trump's loudest critics within the Republican Party over the last several months. She discussed her relationship with the president on Sunday's broadcast of the CBS show, "60 Minutes" with Leslie Stahl.
"I stood for women who were raped when they were 14-years old and the president called me a traitor for that," Greene said. "Things changed after that."
Greene's criticisms of Trump began to get louder when the administration began stalling the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files earlier this year. Trump campaigned in 2024 on a promise to release the files once in office, a promise that experts have said was central part of Trump's narrative to his MAGA base.
Trump forcibly pushed back against Greene's criticisms, and branded her with the moniker "Marjorie Traitor Greene" for a short time. Greene said in the interview that Trump's words inspired death threats against her and her son.
When she brought the threats to the attention of the administration, Greene said Vice President JD Vance responded by telling her he would "look into it."
Greene said Trump's response was more "unkind."
"I did get a personal response from President Trump that I will keep private, but it wasn't ver nice," Greene said.
"Give us a hint of what the president said," Stahl pressed.
"It was extremely unkind," Greene said.
Watch my full interview on 60 Minutes.
I’m America First America Only and no one can get in the way of that. pic.twitter.com/MkXAfHvvaU
— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) December 8, 2025




