Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is eagerly working to secure the title of head cheerleader for the GOP’s push to convert American democracy into a conservative Christian theocracy.
For years, the Georgia Republican has supported the most vile right-wing viewpoints, often under the guise of extreme religiosity. For example, she’s referenced Christianity while lobbing bigoted attacks against Muslim members of Congress like Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, and she’s claimed Christians have a godly duty to make a pilgrimage to visit Jan. 6 defendants (whom she’s described as “patriots”) in jail as they await trial.
Greene is an avowed Christian nationalist, the descriptor for those who believe the United States is divinely favored by God and want the country’s laws to be based on Christianity. She’s spent the past few weeks trying to encourage other people to adopt the overtly anti-democratic moniker as well.
On multiple occasions at the right-wing Turning Point USA conference over the weekend, Greene called on conservatives to embrace Christian nationalism, which — to be clear — is the precise view that motivated murderous white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan.
“We need to be the party of nationalism and I’m a Christian, and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists,” Greene said during an interview at the conference Saturday.
Those comments mirrored remarks she made during a speech at the conference, in which she told a sea of largely white attendees that “I also call myself a Christian nationalist — and that’s not a bad word.”
Marjorie Taylor Greene: “I’m a Christian. How many Christians do we have here? See, I also call myself a Christian nationalist and that’s not a bad word. That’s actually a good thing, right? …I think that’s what the Republican Party needs to be about.” #SAS2022 pic.twitter.com/eHbRwttjRu
— PatriotTakes 🇺🇸 (@patriottakes) July 24, 2022
If you’re not getting the hint, (white) Christian nationalism is her obsession.
“I have no problem saying I’m a Christian nationalist, and I think that’s an identity that we should embrace,” Greene said during a livestream last week, making the ludicrous argument that extremist pro-Christian policies benefit all Americans “regardless of how they vote.”
Marjorie Taylor Greene: "I have no problem saying I am a Christian nationalist. And I think that's an identity that we need to embrace."@RepMTG, read the establishment clause of the First Amendment. pic.twitter.com/kxZiB5vUdp








