Former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has represented Georgia’s 14th district in the U.S. Congress since 2021, posted a series of statements on April 18, 2026, expressing criticism about media coverage of wars and current political priorities in the United States.
In a tweet from April 18, Greene questioned the transparency of war reporting: “At this time in history, mankind has more cameras recording everything that’s happening all over the world yet people are kept in the dark, not shown actual war footage and the truth of what is really happening in Iran, Lebanon, and Gaza. War used to be broadcasted on the”.
Later that day, she commented on domestic economic issues and recent political controversies: “You know what would make America great again? Reducing the outrageous cost of owning a car and a house and health insurance. Oh wait, I forgot new MAGA is about covering up the Epstein files and fighting and funding more wars in the Middle East that actually drives the cost of”.
In another post from April 18, Greene criticized former President Donald Trump’s stance on COVID-19 vaccines and his appointment decisions: “Trump loves vaccines, the covid vaccine the most. So of course he picked one of the biggest covid vax enforcers from his 1st administration to run the CDC. MAHA betrayal once again. Stupid Republican consultants will miscalculate how bad this will hurt midterms too.”
Marjorie Taylor Greene was born in Milledgeville, Georgia in 1974 and currently resides in Rome at age 48. She first entered Congress after replacing Tom Graves in 2021 (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Graves). Since then she has secured re-election multiple times—defeating Kevin Van Ausdal by nearly 50 percentage points in 2020; Marcus Flowers by over thirty points in 2022; and Shawn Harris with approximately two-thirds of votes cast during her most recent campaign.
Greene’s comments reflect ongoing debates within American politics regarding foreign policy transparency, domestic costs for average citizens, and internal divisions within major parties over pandemic response policies.



