Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) wearing a mask, which reads “Trump won”, speaks with a colleague on the opening day of the 117th Congress on the opening day of the 117th Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Jan. 3, 2021.
Bill O’Leary | Reuters
Lawmakers and activists are calling to remove freshman GOP Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from the House Education Committee and from Congress.
Videos and social media activity from 2018 and 2019 recently resurfaced that show Greene harassing a survivor of the Parkland school shooting, falsely suggesting that several deadly school and mass shootings were staged, indicating support for executing prominent Democrats, and expressing approval of far-right conspiracy theories.
“It’s absolutely appalling and I think that the focus has to be on the Republican leadership of this House of Representatives for the disregard they have for the deaths of those children,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a weekly news conference Thursday.
Democratic Rep. Jahana Hayes circulated a letter Thursday asking House Republican leadership to remove Greene from her appointment on the House Committee on Education and Labor. Hayes represents Connecticut’s 5th District, including Newtown, where the deadly mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School occurred in 2012.
Democratic Rep. Jimmy Gomez of California announced Thursday he would introduce a resolution to expel Greene from Congress that would require a two-thirds majority to pass.
The Georgia chapter of youth-led gun safety organization March For Our Lives led a demonstration Friday morning outside Greene’s office in Rome, Georgia. The group organized the event in response to a resurfaced video of Greene heckling David Hogg, a Parkland shooting survivor and co-founder of March For Our Lives, in 2019.
Activists demanded the immediate resignation or expulsion of the congresswoman. A petition calling for Greene’s resignation circulated by March For Our Lives received over 100,000 signatures in 24 hours, the group said.
“We’re tired of her bringing shame onto our region,” Omar Rodriguez, an organizer with the Northwest Georgia Justice Coalition and a constituent in Greene’s district, said at the demonstration. “Greene is not one of us.”
Gun violence prevention groups Everytown for Gun Safety, Moms Demand Action and Students Demand Action also called for Greene’s resignation.
A spokesperson for House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said in a statement that Greene’s comments are “deeply disturbing” and “Leader McCarthy plans to have a conversation with the Congresswoman about them.”
In an interview Thursday on CNN, David Hogg had a message for McCarthy: “If you say this is not your party, actually call it out and hold her accountable, because Republicans always act as if they’re the party of decency and respect.”
“But would the party of decency and respect question whether or not school shootings happened? Would they harass the survivors of these shootings for having different opinions than them?” Hogg asked.
Greene’s office did not respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.
Rep. Cori Bush, a Democrat from Missouri, said Friday she is moving her office away from Greene’s after the Georgia congresswoman “berated” her.
A news crew from NBC affiliate WRCB was reportedly removed from a town hall event on Wednesday and threatened with arrest after trying to ask Greene a question.
Leading up to her November 2020 election, Greene boosted the QAnon conspiracy theory whose followers believe that a cabal of Satanic, pedophilic Democrats and other institutional figures control the government and intended to undermine former President Donald Trump.
Prominent supporters of QAnon were among the pro-Trump extremists who stormed the Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection that left five people dead.
Greene was one of 147 Republican lawmakers who voted to overturn Joe Biden’s presidential election following the attack on the Capitol.
The freshman lawmaker began her congressional candidacy in Georgia’s 6th District, then decided to run in the 14th District when the incumbent Tom Graves announced he would not seek reelection. Her Democratic opponent dropped out of the race and Greene won her seat in the northern Georgia district by nearly 50 percentage points.