Rep. Greene Ousted from Education Committee After Lawmaker鈥檚 Embrace of Conspiracy Theories About School Shootings
In a vote largely split along partisan lines, lawmakers removed Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from the House education committee on Thursday for endorsing conspiracy theories claiming that mass school shootings were hoaxes and supporting violence against political rivals.聽
The vote follows weeks of turmoil for Greene, a freshman congresswoman from Georgia, after news articles and the liberal watchdog group Media Matters for America resurfaced a barrage of social media posts聽espousing racism, anti-Semitism and baseless conspiracy theories. She also used social media to endorse violence against Democratic lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former President Barack Obama.聽
The move strips Greene from her roles on the House budget and education and labor committees, a move that Republican lawmakers argued would set a dangerous precedent but was promoted by many in the education community. Eleven Republicans, more than many expected and a breakaway group that included longtime Michigan Rep. Fred Upton, voted in favor of the resolution.聽
鈥淓very single day that goes by without outright condemnation from every single one of her Republican colleagues, without consequences for her extremist views, is an outright endorsement of white supremacy,鈥 said Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Democrat from Michigan. 鈥淲e owe it to our residents who have been victims of these very hateful views to take action.鈥澛
In , House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from California, condemned Greene鈥檚 rhetoric. Other Republican lawmakers have also derided Greene鈥檚 comments, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell from Kentucky, who called the remarks a 鈥渃ancer鈥 on the party. However, Democrats moved to take away Greene鈥檚 committee assignments after McCarthy failed to do so himself. Greene reportedly received after she apologized to her GOP colleagues during a closed-door caucus Wednesday night.
In , Greene acknowledged that she got 鈥渧ery interested鈥 in disinformation spewed by followers of the QAnon conspiracy theory, a fringe right-wing group that played a role in the Jan. 6 insurrection in the U.S. Capitol, which left five people dead. Fueled by a growing distrust in government, she said she was 鈥渁llowed to believe things that weren鈥檛 true,鈥 though she also alleged that news outlets were 鈥渏ust as guilty as QAnon of providing truth and lies.鈥 She said she regrets posts endorsing the QAnon conspiracy, which purports that a group of Satan-worshiping elites who run a child sex ring are trying to control the government and the media. She said that she believes that 鈥9/11 absolutely happened鈥 and that she鈥檚 simply a victim of 鈥渃ancel culture.鈥 However, she never apologized for her comments, which she maintained 鈥渄o not represent me.鈥澛
Greene argued that the statements at the heart of the debate were made before she was elected to a Georgia House seat 鈥 a line that several Republican colleagues used in her defense. Democrats argued that she defended her comments as recently as this week.聽
While wearing a face mask emblazoned with the words 鈥淔REE SPEECH,鈥 she also confronted some of her remarks on school shootings, including an endorsement of the idea that the 2018 school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, was a 鈥渇alse flag鈥 operation. That tragedy resulted in 17 fatalities. She said on Thursday that 鈥渟chool shootings are absolutely real,鈥 while arguing that she understands the fear and trauma experienced by student survivors because of an incident she experienced as a high schooler herself.聽
鈥淢y school was a gun-free school zone and one of my schoolmates brought guns to school and took our entire school hostage,鈥 she said, reiterating a story she鈥檚 used repeatedly to discredit gun-control advocates. 鈥淎nd that happened right down the hall from my classroom.鈥澛
Nearly are patrolled by armed police officers, according to the most recent federal data.聽
In a viral video taken just weeks after the Parkland shooting, Greene is seen publicly harassing David Hogg on a D.C. street, calling him 鈥渁 coward.鈥 Hogg, then a Parkland student, became a prominent voice in the March For Our Lives movement calling for heightened firearm laws. On Thursday, Greene said her 11th-grade hostage experience allowed her to 鈥渒now the fear that David Hogg had that day鈥 of the mass shooting at his school.
Just a few weeks ago, the Texas Supreme Court to throw out defamation lawsuits after he claimed that the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, was a hoax. That tragedy resulted in 26 fatalities, including the deaths of 20 children.聽
Republicans鈥 support for keeping Greene on House committees puts them at odds with a group of leading school and child welfare groups, including Education Reform Now, the American Federation of Teachers and Sandy Hook Promise. In a letter on Wednesday, from the House education committee, noting that they have 鈥済rave concerns鈥 about her participation in federal education policymaking.聽
Her 鈥渦nfounded claims and conspiracy theories鈥 about the 2012 school shooting in Newtown and the 2018 tragedy in Parkland 鈥渁re nothing short of dangerous rhetoric that only exacerbates suffering for all involved,鈥 the groups wrote in the letter. 鈥淚t is unconscionable that anyone would promote the lie that these tragic events were staged, especially a Member of Congress on a committee charged with the safety of students and educators.鈥
The topic of school safety is especially poignant at this particular moment, the letter continued, as schools across the country grapple with how to confront the COVID-19 pandemic in a way that ensures positive mental health for children.聽
鈥淚t is horrifying to read Rep. Greene鈥檚 comments through the eyes of principals who have endured the very school shootings she denies,鈥 Ronn Nozoe, CEO of the National Association of Secondary School Principals, said in a media release. 鈥淓ach mention of her bizarre, unfounded conspiracies serves only to retraumatize those communities that still struggle to heal.鈥
As House members debated the decision, most Republican lawmakers said they condemned Greene鈥檚 comments, but took issue with the precedent the vote could set, creating a slippery slope if members in the majority revoked committee assignments from a lawmaker from the opposing party for statements made before taking office. Such a reality sets a 鈥渄angerous new standard鈥 that would serve to deepen divisions in Congress, McCarthy argued.聽
The resolution was 鈥渘othing more than a partisan power grab at a critical time when the majority party itself repeatedly calls for unity as our path forward,鈥 said Rep. Jackie Walorski, a Republican from Indiana. 鈥淏ringing a majority resolution to the floor to remove a minority member from her committee assignments is wrong and unprecedented.鈥澛
In arguing a double standard on multiple occasions, Republican lawmakers in 2019, when the House Democratic leadership reprimanded the Democratic lawmaker from Minnesota for claiming that American lawmakers鈥 support of Israel was motivated by money. At the time, House Speaker Pelosi called Omar鈥檚 comments 鈥渁nti-Semetic tropes.鈥澛
鈥淲ho is next?鈥 asked Rep. Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican who has been a leading Congressional voice in falsely maintaining that former President Donald Trump won reelection. 鈥淲ho will the cancel culture attack next?鈥
But Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat from Florida, rejected that line of reasoning before voting to oust Greene from her committees, arguing that the Georgia lawmaker鈥檚 comments were themselves unprecedented. Greene鈥檚 comments and Republicans鈥 failure to hold her accountable for them, Democratic lawmakers argued, would serve to embolden far-right extremists and create a national security threat less than a month after those groups attacked the Capitol.
鈥淣o one else on this floor has called for violence against other members and law enforcement,鈥 she said. 鈥淥nly one member has done that, and refused to back down, and that is the real precedent we are dealing with today.鈥
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