Yuma Sun

Pelosi denounces GOP leaders over Georgia lawmaker’s posts

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WASHINGTON – Speaker Nancy Pelosi intensifie­d pressure Thursday on House Republican leaders for their handling of a controvers­ial GOP freshman, denouncing them for placing a lawmaker who Pelosi says has “mocked the killing of little children” on the chamber’s education committee.

Pelosi’s comments focused on Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., whose views were in the spotlight even before she joined the House this month. Greene supported Facebook posts that advocated violence against Democrats and the FBI. One suggested shooting Pelosi in the head. In response to a post raising the prospect of hanging former President Barack Obama, Greene responded that the “stage is being set.”

On Thursday, Pelosi referred to social media posts reported by Media Matters for America, a liberal watchdog group, in which Greene pushed conspiracy theories or “liked” posts that challenged the veracity of mass shootings at schools in Newtown, Connecticu­t, and Parkland, Florida.

“Assigning her to the education committee, when she has

mocked the killing of little children” at those schools, “what could they be thinking, or is thinking too generous a word for what they might be doing,” Pelosi said of Republican leaders. “It’s absolutely appalling.”

While some Republican­s have condemned Greene’s postings, they were hardly a surprise. The Georgia Republican has expressed support for QAnon conspiracy

theories, which focus on the debunked belief that top Democrats are involved in child sex traffickin­g, Satan worship and cannibalis­m. Facebook videos surfaced last year showing she’d expressed racist, anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim views. Top Republican­s denounced her at the time, hoping to block her from capturing the GOP nomination for her reliably red congressio­nal district in northwest Georgia.

The opposition faded, however, when Greene won the primary and was essentiall­y guaranteed a seat in Congress. By the time she was sworn into office, Greene had ridden with President Donald Trump on Air Force One during his final days in office.

Republican leaders are now confrontin­g a conundrum of their own making. The party largely embraced Greene after she won the primary, making it harder for them to distance themselves from her, especially when many of her views were already well known.

The dynamic raises questions about the GOP’s ability – or interest – in moving past Trumpstyle politics after the former president spent years advancing conspiracy theories of his own.

“Trump didn’t hijack the party, the party became Donald Trump,” said Stuart Stevens, co-founder of the Lincoln Project, a conservati­ve group that staunchly opposes Trump. “They’re radicals.”

CNN reported on Greene’s Facebook posts, which have since been deleted. She tweeted responses before the story was published that didn’t dispute their authentici­ty or disavow them, saying instead: “Many posts have been liked. Many posts have been shared. Some did not represent my views.”

Still, there’s greater pressure on political leaders to address extremism after a pro-Trump mob staged a deadly insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol. California Democratic Rep. Jimmy Gomez announced Wednesday night that he was readying a resolution to expel Greene from Congress because of her past social media activity.

In a statement to Axios, a spokesman for House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy called the posts “deeply disturbing” and said McCarthy “plans to have a conversati­on with the Congresswo­man about them.”

It’s unclear when that conversati­on may happen. McCarthy flew to Florida on Thursday to meet with Trump at his Mar-aLago resort.

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel called the posts “disgusting,” adding that they have “no place in our party” and “should be looked into.”

But McDaniel also spoke to a QAnon issue that goes beyond

Greene.

“I think it’s really important, after what’s just happened in our country, that we have some self reflection on the violence that’s continuing to erupt,” McDaniel said in an interview. “I think QAnon is beyond fringe. I think it’s dangerous. We should be looking at that and making sure we don’t mince words and when we say that we can’t support groups that are initiating violence.”

On Wednesday night, a reporter from WRCB-TV attempted to ask Greene about her social media posts during a public town hall in Dalton, Georgia. The reporter was kicked out of the event and threatened with arrest by a sheriff’s deputy.

The Whitfield County Sheriff’s Office declined to comment and directed questions to Greene’s office. A spokespers­on for Greene’s office said in a statement: “This was a town hall for constituen­ts. Not a press conference.”

The FBI has called QAnon a domestic terrorism threat and the Department of Homeland Security issued a national terrorism bulletin Wednesday warning of the potential for lingering violence from extremists enraged by President Joe Biden’s election and emboldened by the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Greene’s situation is somewhat reminiscen­t of former Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, who was stripped of all his committee assignment­s by his own party’s House leadership after expressing support for white supremacis­ts in 2019. National GOP groups shunned King in the party’s Iowa primary and he was defeated, but he steadfastl­y maintained that he was adhering to his constituen­ts’ beliefs more than most of the rest of his party.

Greene’s online agitation goes beyond past Facebook posts – including making a video that falsely

suggested the 2017 Las

Vegas mass shooting that killed 58 people was staged to advance gun control legislatio­n.

Since winning her congressio­nal seat, Greene has sought to capitalize on her growing national notoriety with conservati­ves, spending more than $206,000 to lure in new donors through Parler, a social media site favored by Trump supporters and right-wing extremists.

The site was effectivel­y booted from the internet following the mayhem at the Capitol after Amazon, which hosted the site, decided Parler wasn’t doing enough to police users who incited violence. Before its removal, Greene’s spending super-charged her presence on Parler, with some of her posts reaching millions of users, according to an analysis of data by The Associated Press.

She frequently attacked Democrats and railed against coronaviru­s pandemic safety measures, like mask-wearing. Greene also called on Congress to overturn the results of Biden’s election.

“I’m tired of seeing weak-kneed Republican­s play defense. I will go on the attack,” Greene said in a Nov. 18 post. “It’s our 1776 moment!” she posted the day before the mob overran the Capitol.

“You have members of Congress who do not feel safe at work right now

because of the violent attempted coup,” said Melissa Ryan, CEO of consultanc­y group Card Strategies, which researches online disinforma­tion and rightwing extremism. “And then you have politician­s like Marjorie Taylor Greene who are not just stoking the fear, but using it as a fundraisin­g tool.”

Greene is now texting supporters, seeking to raise money for her attempt to “impeach Biden.” The fine print of her solicitati­ons, however, shows that any funds she takes in will instead be routed to her campaign account.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JAN. 12 FILE PHOTO, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., passes through a metal detector before entering the House chamber, a new security measure put into place after a mob stormed the Capitol in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JAN. 12 FILE PHOTO, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., passes through a metal detector before entering the House chamber, a new security measure put into place after a mob stormed the Capitol in Washington.

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