Kirk Shooter Loved Trump, Guns, Fuentes — MTG Blames the Left Anyway, Demands ‘National Divorce’: ‘They Hate Us’

Staff Writer
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA). (File photo)

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is demanding a “national divorce” from the left in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s killing—despite the fact that the accused shooter came from a pro-Trump family, loved guns, and was reportedly a fan of far-right extremist Nick Fuentes.

But for Greene, the facts about the shooter’s background don’t matter. In her eyes, Kirk’s murder is just more evidence that the American left is at war with the right—and she’s done trying to live under the same roof.

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“There is nothing left to talk about with the left,” Greene posted on X. “They hate us. They assassinated our nice guy who actually talked to them peacefully debating ideas.”

It’s a jarring take, especially considering that early reports paint the alleged shooter as deeply entrenched in MAGA culture. He wasn’t some Antifa radical. He grew up in a conservative home, had a passion for firearms, and reportedly admired Fuentes, a far-right figure known for white nationalist views.

Still, some on the right are claiming his time at college in Utah—hardly a leftist stronghold—somehow indoctrinated him with liberal ideas. That narrative is all Greene needed to push a broader message: that the entire left is to blame.

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“Then millions on the left celebrated and made clear they want all of us dead,” she continued. “To be honest, I want a peaceful national divorce.”

Greene claims the country is too far gone to save. She says what happens next won’t be political—it’ll be spiritual.

“It’s no longer safe for any of us,” she wrote. “What will come from Charlie Kirk being martyred is already happening. It is a spiritual revival building the kingdom for Christ. But it will happen on the outside, not within the halls of our government. Democrats are hardened in their beliefs and will flip the switch back as soon as they have power.”

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Her frustration wasn’t just directed at the left. Greene also took a swipe at her own party, criticizing Republicans for failing to use their current power to reverse Democratic policies. Republicans currently control the House, Senate, the White House, and have a 6–3 majority on the Supreme Court.

Yet Greene claimed GOP leadership isn’t doing enough—particularly when it comes to government funding still tied to budgets passed under the Biden administration.

“We had 9 months to get it done, but for reasons I don’t understand or agree with, it wasn’t the priority,” she posted. “Government is not answer [sic], God is. Turn your full faith and trust to our Almighty God and our Savior Jesus. Tighten your circle around your family and protect them at all times. I will pray for the left, but personally I want nothing to do with them.”

“I want nothing to do with them,” she declared.

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(Screenshot: X)

Greene’s call for separation isn’t a policy proposal—it’s a personal and ideological breakup. And it’s coming just days after she stood next to Democrats at a press conference pushing for transparency around the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

That moment of bipartisan cooperation is now overshadowed by a full-on declaration of political divorce—sparked, ironically, by a murder committed by someone raised on the very ideology Greene defends.

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