Disagreements among members of Congress are routine and unavoidable. Indeed, such disputes among American lawmakers are as old as the country: officials are tasked with debating important matters, and it’s inevitable that emotions will run high.
There’s a qualitative difference, however, between lawmakers engaging in a heated debate and lawmakers accosting one another in a hallway. According to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), when Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) targeted Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) outside the House chamber this week, it fell into the latter category — and such behavior may require an ethics investigation.
Pelosi said at her weekly news conference that the incident, which she called a “verbal assault” and “abuse” of the New York Democrat, was reported to her leadership office. “It’s so beyond the pale of anything that is in keeping with bringing honor to the House, or not bringing dishonor to the House. It’s so beyond the pale that you wonder … it probably is a matter for the Ethics Committee,” Pelosi said.
The incident in question came on Wednesday, when Washington Post reporters saw the right-wing Georgian, whose record of radicalism cost her committee assignments, “aggressively confront” the Democratic congresswoman and demand to know why Ocasio-Cortez “supports terrorists.” Greene also shouted for the New York lawmaker to defend her “radical socialist” beliefs in some kind of public debate.
Ocasio-Cortez, who’s often known by her AOC initials, ignored Greene’s tantrum and walked away.
“I used to work as a bartender. These are the kinds of people that I threw out of bars all the time,” the congresswoman told reporters yesterday.
On the surface, it may be tempting to dismiss inconsequential confrontations like these. The Georgia Republican is obviously a fringe, clownish figure and a crackpot conspiracy theorist whose nonsense is not to be taken seriously.
But there’s a larger context to incidents like these. As NBC News’ report added, for example, the GOP extremist “has had prior incidents of accosting and chasing people in public she disagrees with.” Indeed, CNN reported this morning that Greene has targeted Ocasio-Cortez, in particular, even taunting members of the New York congresswoman’s staff and making obnoxious comments through a mailbox slot outside the Democrat’s locked office.
This wasn’t an example of misplaced activism from years past; we’re talking about Greene’s antics from 2019 — the year before her election to Congress.
What’s more, there’s growing unease among many Democratic lawmakers that their physical safety might be at risk around some of the more extremist members of the Republican caucus.









