When Marjorie Taylor Greene pushed for the release of Jeffrey Epstein’s files—and asked Trump to invite Epstein’s victims to the Oval Office—the president’s response wasn’t just dismissive.
According to a bombshell New York Times interview, Trump told her the victims “didn’t deserve the honor” to meet with him in the Oval Office. That conversation was the last time they spoke in person.
WHAT’S GOING ON: Greene has been fighting for months to expose the names in the Epstein files, eventually teaming up with Representatives Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie to pass the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
But Trump wasn’t having it.
After Greene threatened to identify Epstein’s associates at a press conference, Trump called her in a rage, reportedly screaming at her so loudly that everyone in her office could hear.
His concern? “My friends will get hurt.”
Let that sink in. The man who campaigned on draining the swamp, exposing elites, and protecting children was yelling at a congresswoman because releasing information about a sex trafficking ring might embarrass his social circle.
THE DETAILS: Soon after, Trump turned on Greene publicly. He rescinded his endorsement, labeled her a “traitor,” and attacked her on social media — language Greene later said placed her and her family in danger.
Following Trump’s posts, Greene says her family received bomb threats, her home was targeted, and her son was named in a death threat.
When she informed Trump, she says he showed no concern and told her she had brought it on herself.
He reportedly sent her long message that completely ignored her safety concerns and attacked her personally—again. When asked for comment, the White House didn’t even pretend to care. Spokesperson Davis Ingle called her complaints “petty bitterness” and said she was “quitting on her constituents.”
“How did all of this end up to a point where it was about releasing files about women who were raped, and not the serious things that I think truly matter?” Greene asked the Times.
“Help reduce the cost of living, fix the housing market, fix health insurance—for the love of God, what the [expletive] is the matter with these people?”
OF COURSE: This is the same president who spent Christmas Day posting a paranoid rant about “sleazebags who loved Jeffrey Epstein,” insisting they’d all turn out to be Democrats—while attacking the only Republican, Massie, who actually helped pass the transparency bill.
Trump has claimed for years he “dropped” Epstein “long before it was fashionable.” The problem is, the files appear to tell a different story.
WHY IT MATTERS: Greene isn’t some leftist critic. She’s been one of Trump’s most reliable attack dogs for years. Her breaking with him—and going public about his protection of Epstein’s “friends”—it signals something bigger is cracking in MAGA world.
The fact that Trump’s primary concern about releasing files on child sex trafficking was protecting his buddies tells you everything you need to know about his actual priorities.
The rupture also followed Trump’s refusal to back Greene for higher office after internal polling showed she would likely lose a statewide Senate race — a moment Trump later cited as the beginning of their split, even as Greene insists the Epstein fight was the real breaking point.
BOTTOM LINE: Trump had a choice between rape survivors and his social circle. He chose his friends. Every accusation really is a confession.
Greene announced she will resign from Congress in January, exiting the movement she once championed. If she were serious about accountability, she could take it upon herself to read portions of the Epstein Files, including his list of clients – with immunity – on the House floor before her term ends.


