Tucker Carlson and MTG Turn on GOP in Stunning MAGA Revolt

For years, Tucker Carlson and Marjorie Taylor Greene were among the loudest voices defending the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s America First movement.
Now they’re publicly walking away.
In a stunning rebuke of the party they helped champion, Carlson declared that he can no longer support Republicans — and Greene quickly signaled she feels the same way.
“Tucker is not the only one who is done supporting the Republican Party,” Greene wrote Monday.
“There is A LOT of us that are absolutely fed up and will not support a party that betrays its voters and country.”
Then came the line that sent shockwaves through conservative circles:
“We are DONE with the America LAST Republican Party.”
The explosive comments came after Carlson’s own political breakup with the GOP during an appearance on the Can’t Be Censored podcast.
“I would not support the Republican Party. There’s no chance I would support the Republican Party,” Carlson said. “I’m not going to support the Democratic Party — I’m not sure what I’m going to do.”
For a man who spent decades defending Republican candidates, Republican policies, and Republican voters, it was a remarkable admission.
And Carlson wasn’t done.
“How could I or any American voter support a political party that’s not loyal to the United States?” he asked.
The former Fox News star has spent weeks attacking what he sees as the Republican establishment’s willingness to involve America in another Middle East conflict. He has repeatedly blasted U.S. military action involving Iran and accused GOP leaders of putting foreign interests ahead of American citizens.
The fight has also opened a rare and very public rift between Carlson and President Donald Trump.
Once one of Trump’s most influential allies, Carlson has increasingly questioned the administration’s foreign policy decisions, warning that America First voters never signed up for another overseas conflict.
Now, Greene appears to be standing beside him.
Neither Carlson nor Greene expressed support for Democrats. In fact, both made clear their frustration runs in the opposite direction: they believe Republicans have abandoned the very voters who delivered them power.
That sentiment is resonating with a growing segment of the MAGA base that feels disconnected from Republican leaders in Washington.
For years, Carlson and Greene helped energize millions of grassroots conservatives.
Today, they’re sending a very different message.
The party they spent years fighting for may no longer be worth fighting for.
Carlson put it in the simplest possible terms.
“I’m out.”
Greene’s response suggested he may have far more company than Republican leaders would like to admit.








