
If anyone thought Marjorie Taylor Greene was heading quietly into retirement after leaving Congress, they clearly haven’t been paying attention.
The firebrand Georgia conservative is signaling that her political career may have left Capitol Hill, but her public platform is far from finished. Greene took to X on Tuesday to announce a new project titled Life with MTG, posting a teaser video and a simple message: “My New Series” is “COMING SOON.”
The trailer is vintage Greene — packed with high-energy footage, political battles and defiant rhetoric from her years in Washington. It closes with Greene delivering a message that sounds less like a farewell and more like a declaration of war on the political establishment.
“I won’t stop living, I won’t stop speaking and I won’t stop fighting.” She then adds: “And neither should you.”
For supporters who viewed Greene as one of the most outspoken America First voices in Congress, the announcement suggests she intends to remain a major player in conservative media and grassroots politics even after surrendering her House seat earlier this year.
Greene’s departure from Congress followed one of the most dramatic political breakups on the right in recent memory. Once among President Trump’s most loyal allies, the Georgia Republican increasingly found herself at odds with the administration over several high-profile issues.
The disagreements stretched from foreign policy and health-care debates to lingering questions surrounding the Jeffrey Epstein files. But the sharpest divide emerged over America’s military involvement overseas.
As tensions escalated in the Middle East, Greene openly blasted what she viewed as a betrayal of the anti-interventionist principles that energized millions of Trump voters during his first presidential campaign. Shortly after the conflict with Iran erupted, Greene expressed frustration that the United States appeared to be sliding toward another overseas entanglement. “We’re in another f—ing war, and we’ve got American troops being killed.”
In a widely discussed interview with conservative commentator Megyn Kelly, Greene questioned whether the movement’s original promise of avoiding endless foreign conflicts was being abandoned. “I want to say, what is happening to the man that I supported, you supported, the man that denounced what happened in Iraq, the man that said ‘No more foreign wars,’ ‘No more regime change?’”
Now, with Life with MTG on the horizon, Greene appears poised to take that debate directly to viewers rather than fellow lawmakers.












