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Marjorie Taylor Greene Blasts `Pissing Contest In Washington DC Between The Men`
During her appearance on "The View," Greene also slammed "weak Republican men" who are afraid of "strong Republican women."
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) didn`t mince words about the dysfunction in Washington, D.C., and what she sees as "weak Republican men" during an appearance on "The View." "I`m really tired of the pissing contest in Washington, D.C., between the men, I really am," Greene said on the program Tuesday morning. The House Republican, who has in recent weeks fought back against her own party amid the government shutdown, was referring to leaders like House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.). "People have been crushed by decades of failure in Washington, D.C., and so I have no problem pointing fingers at everyone," Greene said. "The worst thing I can`t get over is we`re not working right now, and I put that criticism on the speaker of the House. And we should be working right now." Greene said she wants "all federal workers to be paid" and for "federal programs to be funded" after more than a month of the shutdown. "It`s an embarrassment to me that we`re not in session," she added. Greene, who told "The View" co-hosts that she`s still a diehard supporter of President Donald Trump, has been routinely slamming her Republican colleagues over a lack of a health care plan and the refusal to release more files on notorious sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. After criticizing Johnson for not having a single health care plan, "View" co-host Sunny Hostin gave a simple explanation. "There is no plan," she said. Greene agreed. "You know what, you want to know something? That I believe is the truth," Greene said. "There are a lot of ideas, a lot of bills, but there`s no consensus. And I think that`s a failure, I do." Greene made clear her thoughts on the current Republican leadership. "When I talk about weak Republican men, I`m pretty much oftentimes talking about the leadership in the House and the Senate," Greene said to applause from the audience. "They`re not getting our agenda done." Greene previously referred to "weak Republican men" during an interview with The Washington Post last month. "There`s a lot of weak Republican men and they`re more afraid of strong Republican women," she told the publication. "So they always try to marginalize the strong Republican women that actually want to do something and actually want to achieve."
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