Greene’s Possible Replacement Revealed After Trump Fallout

Conservative commentator Laura Loomer set off a new wave of speculation Saturday by openly teasing a possible move to Georgia after President Donald Trump withdrew his endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in a blistering late-night Truth Social post.
Loomer, a staunch Trump ally with roughly 1.8 million followers on X, said the president told her he wanted Greene “primaried,” then posed a pointed question to her audience.
“Should I move to Georgia?” she asked.
Her post, paired with Trump’s Truth Social message calling Greene a “ranting lunatic,” immediately triggered questions about whether Loomer is positioning herself as a potential challenger in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District.
Greene has not responded to Loomer’s posts.
Loomer and Greene have publicly attacked each other throughout the year, with their feud escalating sharply since summer.
In August, the two clashed after Loomer criticized Medal of Honor recipient Florent Groberg, sparking a days-long exchange of insults.
JUST IN:
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) November 15, 2025
President Trump calls for Marjorie Traitor Greene to be primaried. He said he will endorse a challenger to MTG, and says she has become a “ranting lunatic”.
Should I move to Georgia? 😆🤣
I told you all this was coming… @mtgreenee is so cooked. pic.twitter.com/Y8IxZIGQrR
Saturday’s posts show Loomer revisiting and escalating those accusations.
She described Greene as “no friend to MAGA,” accused her of disloyalty dating back to 2021 and referenced claims about Greene’s political alliances during the 2022 midterms.
Several of Loomer’s follow-up posts also highlighted Democrats publicly supporting Greene, adding more friction to an already volatile feud.
Trump’s public break with Greene, delivered in a lengthy statement late Friday, removed one of the Georgia Republican’s most valuable political assets, the president’s personal endorsement.
In his post, Trump said Greene had become consumed with “complaining,” claimed she had “turned left” politically and said conservative voters in Georgia were already considering a primary challenge.
He said he would give “Complete and Unyielding Support” to the “right person” who enters the race.
Trump did not name any potential challengers.
Loomer has not announced a campaign, but her suggestion that she may move to Georgia came within hours of Trump’s statement and immediately fueled speculation online that she could be testing the waters.
If Loomer relocates and enters the 2026 primary, it would place two highly visible right-wing firebrands against each other in one of the most closely watched House districts in the country.
Georgia’s 14th District remains deeply conservative, meaning the primary is typically the decisive contest.
A high-profile rivalry amplified by Trump’s public intervention would almost certainly attract national attention, major fundraising and intense media coverage.
For now, Loomer has made no formal announcement, only raising the question.
Greene, responded Sunday to President Donald Trump’s recent decision to label her a “traitor” following their political split, calling the remark “hurtful” and cautioning that such language could pose risks to her personal safety.
“The most hurtful thing he said, which is absolutely untrue, is he called me a traitor, and that is so extremely wrong,” Greene told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union.”
“Those are the types of words used that can radicalize people against me and put my life in danger,” she added.
Trump announced Friday on Truth Social that he was withdrawing his endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, calling her a “ranting lunatic” and accusing her of “complaining” instead of highlighting what he described as his administration’s “record achievements,” according to Fox News.
He said Greene, a longtime ally within the MAGA movement, was “upset” that he had not returned her calls, asserted that she had “gone far left,” and vowed to fully support any conservative primary challenger in the 2026 midterms. Greene was first elected to her north Georgia district in 2020 and has won re-election twice.





