Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GO., He said definitely on Friday that he will not enter the US Senate Race, as Republican Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff, in the state of Georgia’s battlefield as a crucial pickup to expand most of three places next year.
“Someone said once, ‘The Senate is where good ideas will die.’ They were right.
“I will not fight for a team that refuses to win, who protects their weaker players, who undermines the people who should serve,” he added.
Greene’s announcement occurs a day after another ally of Trump, Deputy Buddy Carter, R-GO., He announced his candidacy for the Senate, making him the first main republican candidate to challenge Ossoff.
“Even with some good Senate Republicans, nothing changes,” said Greene.
Greene told reporters on Wednesday that she would be “thinking about it and talking to my family this weekend” about setting up a Senate offer or getting into the governor’s race.
“It’s great to have options and I will make a decision based on where I think I can be more effective,” she said at the time.
A Greene -Gate -Gate did not immediately respond to a request for commentary on whether Greene had made a decision about the governor’s race.
Greene’s cautious republicans sought an alternative candidate after Georgia’s governor Brian Kemp said he would not enter the Senate race.
Greene kept in her position that defeating Ossoff “would be easy,” after the beginning of this week reject those who doubted she could be elected to the Senate.
“Yes, they said the same thing about Donald Trump when he ran in 2016 and said the same thing about him in 2024,” Greene told reporters on Wednesday when she was asked about skeptics who suggested that she has no chance of taking the Ossoff seat.
Greene was first elected to the house in 2020.
Greene easily won reelection last year, winning 64.4% of the vote in her district in a state Trump turned after losing him narrowly to Joe Biden in 2020.