Trump’s breakup with Greene is not the same as others. But like always, there may be second chances

FILE - Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign event at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, Oct. 15, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore, File)
FILE - Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign event at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, Oct. 15, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore, File)
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President Donald Trumpโ€™s chaotic political universe has at least one consistent law that rises above any other: The president has no permanent friends and no permanent enemies. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is the latest figure to test that Trumpian rule after announcing her plans to leave Congress in January. Greene originated as a leading face of the โ€œMake America Great Againโ€ movement. That makes her different from many mainstream conservative Republicans who have gone back-and-forth in their relationships with Trump. The president also has implicitly left the door open to making up.

ATLANTA (AP) โ€” President Donald Trumpโ€™s chaotic political universe has at least one consistent law that rises above any other: The president has no permanent friends and no permanent enemies.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia lawmaker who announced plans to leave Congress in January, is the latest figure to test that Trumpian rule. Throughout his political career, the president has sparred with Republicans who, recognizing his grip on the party, eventually came into or returned to the fold, often in senior administration positions.

And already on Saturday, Trump referred to Greene as โ€œa nice person,โ€ hours after calling her a โ€œtraitor."

Yet Greene, who originated as a leading face of the โ€œMake America Great Againโ€ movement, supported Trump's false claims that his 2020 election defeat was fraudulent and shares his pugilistic style. So she offers a notable contrast to the typical Trump roller coaster faced by other Republicans. Those mostly mainstream conservatives begrudgingly endured the president before finally citing some breaking point or tagged Trump as a threat to democracy only to join his ranks as he remade the GOP in his own image.

In the end, Greene and Trump fell out not over ideological differences or fundamental fissures over his character but rather disagreements over the Jeffrey Epstein files and health care. With her planned departure, Greene becomes the most prominent MAGA figure to break with Trump, and what that means for both of them is an open question.

โ€œI have fought harder than almost any other elected Republican to elect Donald Trump and Republicans to power,โ€ Greene said in her Friday video announcing her plans.

โ€œItโ€™s all sort of out of left field,โ€ said Kevin Bishop, a former longtime aide to Sen. Lindsey Graham, a stark example of a Trump critic-turned-ally. Whatโ€™s clear, Bishop said, is that Trump, even with lagging approval ratings overall, retains โ€œgreat sway over the activists and, frankly, all corners of the Republican Party.โ€

Trump was not always the undisputed center of Republican power and identity. Even as he took control of a crowded GOP presidential field in 2016, his rivals pummeled him.

Graham, the South Carolina senator, called him a โ€œkookโ€ and a โ€œrace-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.โ€ Within a few years, he was among Trumpโ€™s biggest fans in the Senate, calling him โ€œmy president.โ€

Marco Rubio, then a Florida senator and now Trumpโ€™s secretary of state, called him a โ€œcon artistโ€ and โ€œthe most vulgar person to ever aspire to the presidency.โ€ He and Trump exchanged veiled insults about each otherโ€™s male anatomy.

During that same campaign, a young author and future Vice President JD Vance wrote a New York Times op-ed titled: โ€œMr. Trump Is Unfit For Our Nationโ€™s Highest Office.โ€ Vanceโ€™s former roommate disclosed a text message in which Vance compared Trump to Adolf Hitler, Nazi Germanyโ€™s authoritarian author of the Holocaust. By 2021, Vance was a first-time Senate candidate from Ohio who sang Trumpโ€™s praises on immigration, trade and other matters.

For Republicans who did not make that about-face, their political careers nearly always faced dead ends. Those recognizing the cost of their decisions course corrected.

Sen. Bill Cassidy was among the few Republicans who voted to convict Trump after he left office in 2021. Yet eying reelection in 2026, the Louisiana physician provided Trump the deciding committee vote to confirm the controversial Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary.

Greene noted the trends.

โ€œMost of the establishment Republicans who secretly hate him and who stabbed him in the back and never defended him against anything have all been welcomed in right after the election,โ€ she said.

Bishop said those flips arenโ€™t simply about politicians being politicians but about Trump bringing the vibes of real estate and marketing to politics.

โ€œHe views the presidency as slightly more transactional than maybe the way people in politics view the world,โ€ Bishop said. โ€œA businessman says, โ€˜Well, we fought over this deal. But in a couple of years maybe we can work together and put together another deal.โ€™โ€

Bishop, who worked in Grahamโ€™s Senate office throughout Trumpโ€™s first presidency, said Trump โ€œcame out of the hospitality industryโ€ and, despite his harshest policies and rhetoric, is less inclined to judge political opponents and allies in ideological or philosophical terms.

It's a trait Trump put on display in the Oval Office on Friday in a friendly meeting with New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist the president has previously mislabeled as a communist.

Mamdani broke through, perhaps, by doing something Trump appreciates most: winning. Bishop said Graham did it with โ€œa great sense of humorโ€ that Trump appreciated and because they bonded on the golf course. โ€œYou spend three or four hours on a golf course,โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s a lot of time to get to know someone.โ€

Graham once offered a simpler explanation, telling The New York Times that his evolution on Trump was a way โ€œto try to be relevant.โ€

Itโ€™s notable that one of Greeneโ€™s fights โ€“- releasing the Epstein files -โ€“ went her way, not Trumpโ€™s. The president framed his retreat as something he was fine with all along. Even on health care, Greene can claim some measure of victory. The White House and GOP Hill leaders have countered expiring health insurance tax credits by offering a different potential subsidy: direct payments to consumers as they shop for polices.

Greene certainly has options. She has personal financial security, with her ethics disclosures suggesting a net worth in the many millions of dollars. She has 1.6 million followers on X. She has long been a feature on the conservative media circuit โ€” notably dating Brian Glenn, a right-wing White House correspondent for Real Americaโ€™s Voice. And her recent break with Trump came with appearances on mainstream media, including ABCโ€™s โ€œThe View.โ€

She could still run for Georgia governor, which will be an open seat, or for the U.S. Senate seat held by Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff. But Greene acknowledged Trumpโ€™s potential power in her heavily Republican House district, saying she wanted to spare her constituents an ugly primary fight.

โ€œOnce I left her, she was gone because she would never have survived the primary,โ€ Trump told reporters. He added in a separate NBC interview that the congresswoman has โ€œgot to take a little rest.โ€

Still, the president rebuffed any suggestion that there is any need for โ€œforgivenessโ€ in their relationship, and he told NBC, โ€œI can patch up differences with anyone.โ€

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Associated Press writer Will Weissert in Washington contributed to this report.


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