Greene raises concerns over OBBB’s impact on federalism and AI regulation

Greene raises concerns over OBBB’s impact on federalism and AI regulation
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, U.S. Representative for Georgia's 14th District — https://aflcio.org/
0Comments

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, currently serving in the U.S. Congress representing Georgia’s 14th district, has expressed her concerns about federalism and artificial intelligence on social media. Her tweets highlight issues she believes are critical to national governance and policy.

On June 6, 2025, Rep. Greene emphasized the urgency of removing a specific section from the “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB), which she claims undermines federalism for a decade by allowing AI to operate without sufficient oversight. She noted that “40 state Attorney Generals wrote a letter demanding the UNPRECEDENTED federal power grab be removed” from this legislation.

In another post on the same day, Rep. Greene shared a link via Twitter at 12:00:01 UTC, although no additional commentary was provided in this tweet (link).

A third tweet was posted shortly thereafter at 12:00:03 UTC with another link, but it similarly lacked accompanying text or context (link).

Marjorie Taylor Greene was born in Milledgeville, Georgia in 1974 and now resides in Rome. She graduated from the University of Georgia with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in 1996 and succeeded Tom Graves as representative of Georgia’s 14th District in 2021.



Related

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, U.S. Representative for Georgia%27s 14th District - https://aflcio.org/

Marjorie Taylor Greene addresses Capitol protests and political support in recent posts

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene posted several updates on September 5-6, 2025 addressing protest activity at the Capitol and voicing support for Tina Peters.

Chris Hosey, Director of Georgia Bureau of Investigation - gbi.georgia.gov

Number of sex offenders living in Chattooga County grows as of Q2

There were five more registered sex offenders living in Chattooga County as of the second quarter of 2025 than in the previous quarter, according to the Georgia Sex Offender Registry.

Scott Dutton, Assistant Director of Georgia Bureau of Investigation - gbi.georgia.gov

Registry shows 126 sex offenders living in Polk County as of week ending Aug. 30

There were 126 registered sex offenders living in Polk County as of the week ending Aug. 30, according to the Georgia Sex Offender Registry.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Rome Reporter.