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Just days before her resignation from Congress becomes official, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said she is increasingly worried about threats to her life and her family. Greene, who has been publicly feuding with her former ally President Donald Trump, said her office has documented 773 death threats since she took office in January 2021.
She said those numbers do not include repeated swatting and doxing calls to her Georgia home.
“I don’t want to have anything to do with that anymore because I have seen first hand over the past five years the horrific results of it,” Greene told Atlanta News First on Monday.
“This is just the conduct that is extremely unbecoming of the president of the United States,” she said.
Greene said a pipe bomb was recently mailed to her office, and she described specific threats made against her son.
“The direct threats on my son, I fully blame President Trump,” Greene said.
It is not the first time Greene has faced danger.
In 2024, Georgia lawmakers passed SB 421, legislation that increased penalties for swatting and doxing after a police officer racing to Greene’s home in response to a fake call struck and killed a driver.
Greene said Trump’s reaction after she informed him of the recent threats left her shaken.
“His response was unspeakable,” Greene said. “What he said to me, I’m not going to repeat it, but it was absolutely unreal. And he had no sympathy for me or for my family.”
Greene’s break from the Republican Party intensified during this year’s government shutdown when she opposed her party on Affordable Care Act subsidies and later on releasing documents related to Jeffrey Epstein.
She said those documents ultimately caused the final rupture between her and Trump.
“That’s really been shocking,” Greene said. “I will make no apologies for standing with women who were raped. I think that’s the right thing to do. And, and I’m sticking with it.”
Greene said she does not believe Trump is named in the long awaited files, adding that victims she has worked with have never implicated him.
She said Trump warned her that “people would get hurt” if the files were released, but she said she does not want anyone responsible for abuse to be shielded.
“I didn’t need to see a single thing in a file or read anything that was confidential before that to make that decision,” Greene said.
Greene is scheduled to leave Congress on January 5, 2026.
Her seat in Georgia’s 14th District remains one of the most closely watched House contests, drawing a state senator, a former Greene staffer and several other candidates into the race.
Greene said she does not plan to endorse anyone in the primary.
Trump struck a more conciliatory tone in November when asked about her just hours after she savaged him in a lengthy resignation statement.
Trump first reacted Friday night during a phone conversation with ABC News White House correspondent Rachel Scott. “I think it’s great news for the country. It’s great,” he said.
Trump said Greene “went BAD” because he refused to return what he described as her “never ending barrage of phone calls.”
“Nevertheless, I will always appreciate Marjorie, and thank her for her service to our Country!” Trump added.