Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Says She No Longer Believes In QAnon | JP
It’s been awhile since QAnon has been in the news.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene while being interviewed on The View was asked about her previous support of QAnon.
Greene initially side stepped the question and shared that she previously addressed her past support of QAnon awhile ago.
She then addressed the question straight on and shared she was a “victim” of “lies” being shared by QAnon posters on social media.
The Hill provided further details on MTG’s comments about QAnon:
During her appearance on “The View” on Tuesday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said she no longer believes in QAnon, which she has supported and promoted for years.
When asked by co-host Sunny Hostin if she’s still a believer, Greene waved her hand.
“Oh I went over that a long time ago,” she replied.
“So you’ve changed?” Hostin said back.
“Well no, I haven’t changed,” Greene said. “I was a victim, just like you were, of media lies and stuff you read on social media. You all have attacked me many times on this show because of things you’ve read about me that weren’t true, or clips you’ve seen.”
When co-host raised the point of “Jewish space lasers,” an aspect of QAnon that Greene has repeated before, Greene replied, “Not even true. Yeah, that’s been rebuffed.”
Greene posted and has since deleted a post on Facebook about “Jewish space lasers,” an antisemitic conspiracy theory that suggests California wildfires were caused by lasers linked to the Rothschilds, a family that has been falsely connected to other antisemitic conspiracy theories for over two centuries.
Watch her here:
Marjorie Taylor Greene on The View:
HOSTIN: “You don’t believe in QAnon anymore? You’ve changed?”
MTG: “No, I haven’t changed. I was a victim—just like you were—of media lies and stuff you read on social media.”The rebrand is wild. From spreading conspiracy theories to… pic.twitter.com/vAY1GOaFa8
— Brian Allen (@allenanalysis) November 4, 2025
MTG when she was first elected was the first open support of the QAnon theory.
Here’s a New York Times report expressing Greene’s support for QAnon after she won her primary in 2021:
Now, with Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, one of the most Republican in the country, likely to vote red in November, Ms. Greene is all but assured of getting the chance to put into action her talk of rooting out an imagined deep-state cabal of pedophile Satanists who are trying to take down President Trump.
QAnon, a conspiracy theory that has attracted a fervent following since it emerged from the troll-infested fringes of the internet nearly three years ago, has already inspired real-world violence, including the killing of a mob boss. Its supporters are slowly becoming a political force that some Republicans feel they cannot afford to alienate, even as the party struggles to distance itself from racist and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.
More than a dozen candidates who have expressed some degree of support for QAnon are running for Congress as Republicans, their path cleared by Mr. Trump’s own espousal of conspiracy theories.
Most are going to lose. But a few, Ms. Greene foremost among them, have managed to win. Declaring victory on Tuesday night, she said she was “just as fed up with what I’ve seen from spineless Republicans” as she was with Democrats.