Marjorie Taylor Greene is running for Congress – and is unrepentant about her racist rhetoric and support for the QAnon conspiracy theory.
With the runoff for the Republican nomination in the conservative district approaching, some voters seem unaware of Greeneās controversial views, or shrug it off.
Greene received the most votes in the June 9 Republican primary for Georgiaās 14th Congressional District but failed to win outright. She now faces fellow Republican John Cowan, a neurosurgeon, in a runoff election Tuesday for the open seat.
The district, which stretches from the outskirts of metro Atlanta to the largely rural northwest corner of the state, is heavily conservative, and the winner of the runoff will likely earn a ticket to Washington.
Greene often communicates with supporters through stream-of-consciousness style videos posted to social media.
Shortly after the initial primary, PoliticoĀ revealed a series of videos where Greene, who is white, expresses racist, anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim views. In one of the videos she claims thereās an āIslamic invasionā into government offices. In another, she says Black and Hispanic men are being held back by āgangs and dealing drugs,ā later adding, āitās not white people.ā She also has touted an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that billionaire investor and philanthropist George Soros, who is Jewish, collaborated with the Nazis.
Greeneās campaign did not respond to multiple interview requests from The Associated Press. But she previously addressed the criticism on Twitter. āThe Fake News Media, the DC Swamp, and their radical leftist allies see me as a very serious threat. I will not let them whip me into submission,ā she said without backing away from the remarks.
The unearthed videos led several high-profile Republicans to denounce her campaign. House Minority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana released a statement calling Greeneās comments ādisgustingā and threw his support behind Cowan. Rep. Jody Hice of Georgia clawed back his endorsement of Greene,Ā sayingĀ her statements are āappalling and deeply troubling.ā
But many other Republican officials have remained on the sidelines.
Greene is also part of aĀ growing listĀ of candidates who have expressed support for QAnon, the far-right U.S. conspiracy theory popular among some supporters of President Donald Trump. Lauren Boebert, another candidate who has expressed support for QAnon, recently upset a five-term congressman in a Republican primary in Colorado.
Cowan has expressed staunch support for Trump, touting a pro-gun and pro-border wall message. He says heāll use his experience as a doctor to improve the health care system and will push to repeal the Affordable Care Act, though he supports keeping protections for pre-existing conditions.
He has also strongly pushed back on Greeneās rhetoric.
āShe loves saying inflammatory, incendiary things to get attention and to get likes and to make news, but then when sheās questioned about it, she just folds,ā Cowan said in an interview. āYou canāt challenge anything sheās said without being accused of being part of the āswampā or āfake news.āā
While Greeneās comments have caused a stir in Washington, some in her district seemed unaware or unfazed by them while casting ballots during early voting.
Kris Young, who voted for Greene at a polling site in Dallas, Georgia, on Thursday, said he hadnāt heard the criticism.
āI donāt even know if Iād buy into that,ā Young said. āSheās just pro-American is what I see.ā
Larry Silker, a 72-year-old retiree who cast a ballot at the same location, said he saw Greene as a āgo-getterā and voted for her. Reports of Greeneās racist remarks didnāt dissuade him.
āWell yeah, you know, you see it,ā he said. āBut do you put faith in it?ā
There were critics of Greene voting as well.
āDonāt like her. Donāt care for some of the things Iāve read about her and heard about her,ā said Gene Melton, a 53-year-old truck driver.
Kerwin Swint, director of the School of Government and International Affairs at Kennesaw State University, said Greene initially appealed to many conservatives who want a firebrand in the seat, but that her chances of winning have been complicated as more information comes to light.
āShe is not just a conservative, she is literally on the fringe of some very troubling beliefs,ā Swint said.
āThis is the kind of candidate that a lot of Republicans, and really Iām talking about Republican officials who are elected and appointed, sort of cringe when they hear what she says or they look at what she believes in,ā he said.
Greene has also expressed strong views on the removal of Confederate monuments.
āWhether I see a statue that may be something I would fully disagree with, like Adolf Hitler, maybe a statue of Satan himself, I would not want to say, ātake it down,āā Greene said at a city council meeting in Dalton, Georgia, in mid-June. āBut again, itās so that I could tell my children and teach others about who these people are, what they did, and what they may be about.ā

