CNN Contributor Says MTG ‘Went Off The Deep End’ After Break with Trump
CNN contributor and veteran Republican strategist Scott Jennings delivered a blunt assessment of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) during a rare appearance on ABCโs This Week, arguing that Greeneโs recent attacks on President Donald Trump stem more from personal frustration than from any serious ideological break within the MAGA movement.
Jennings appeared on the program to promote his new book when anchor Jonathan Karl asked him about what Karl described as a โburgeoning splitโ inside MAGA-world โ a narrative increasingly pushed by legacy media outlets eager to frame Republican politics as unstable heading into a pivotal election year.
โThe, kind of, divide in MAGA,โ Karl said. โWhich is a relatively new phenomenon โ I mean, there was always a little bit there, but โฆif I were to say what the most surprising story [of the year] was, I would say Marjorie Taylor Greene becomes not just a Trump critic, but aโโ
Jennings interrupted with a jab that immediately cut through the premise.
โMTG becomes a lib!โ Jennings said.
While clearly tongue-in-cheek, the comment underscored what many Republicans see as an overreaction to Greeneโs recent criticisms of Trump and the party leadership. In recent months, Greene has publicly complained about what she characterizes as broken promises from Republican leadership, lack of follow-through on conservative priorities, and Trumpโs decision not to endorse her for a potential statewide run in Georgia.
Jennings suggested that the dispute is less about policy and more about political disappointment.
โShe got a little bent out of shape because the president wouldnโt support her for a statewide office in Georgia โ which she was going to lose if she had gotten into it, by the way,โ Jennings said. โAnd so she goes off the deep end.โ
Greeneโs criticism of Trump has surprised many grassroots conservatives, given her long history as one of his most vocal and reliable defenders in Congress. Her sharp turn has included public complaints about Republican leadership, warnings about โunipartyโ influence, and suggestions that the party has failed to fully deliver on the America First agenda โ rhetoric that has resonated with some activists but raised eyebrows among party strategists.
That unease only deepened following Greeneโs unexpected announcement that she would resign from Congress, a move that stunned allies and critics alike. While Greene framed her departure as a rejection of what she called a broken institution, many Republicans interpreted it as a sign of frustration rather than a serious realignment within the conservative movement.
Jennings, for his part, rejected the idea that Greeneโs break signals meaningful fractures within MAGA or the Republican base more broadly.
โLook, I donโt think these divisions and all this fraying are as big a deal as some people make it out to be,โ Jennings said. โTrump is still extraordinarily popular among Republicans. Heโs the strongest party boss in the modern era. And he can get his allies in Congress to do most anything he wants them to do โ which is why I think in the coming year they really ought to spend some time trying to codify โฆ his executive orders and some of the other initiatives that heโs had, really try to make it stick and really fight it out.โ
Jennings argued that Republicans would be better served focusing on governing and locking in Trump-era policies rather than amplifying internal disagreements that the media is eager to exploit.
โBecause I think a lot of the things he did would actually be pretty popular political debates to have,โ he added.









