Marjorie Greene Dissed By Crowd During Georgia Holiday Parade

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) — who apparently all of a sudden thinks Nick Fuentes is not that great to be around, despite appearing at his conference earlier this year and then defending her participation — didn’t get that enthusiastic of a response when participating in a Christmas parade seemingly held in Dallas, Georgia, where she also joined a local Christmas parade last year.

“Even though it’s a bit rainy, we’re still going to celebrate Christmas and the birth of our Savior, Jesus Christ!” Greene said on Twitter on Sunday. A piece of footage subsequently circulated showing Greene walking along the parade route with hardly anybody in the camera shot even reacting. She seemed to garner a more excited response during last year’s parade, when she was waving from a vehicle that also displayed a sign telling readers to “Flood the Polls!” — which is kind of an odd way to say that.

The clip from this year with what looks like hardly anybody caring about Greene’s presence at a central point of the parade route (there’s a very large Christmas tree in the background) has already been viewed well over a million times just on Twitter. It looks like Dallas is even in Greene’s district, where she recently won re-election to the House after making it through a challenge to the legal eligibility of her running for re-election because of her ties to the Capitol riot, a GOP primary challenge, and a general election campaign last month from Democratic veteran Marcus Flowers.

“As a guy that’s done almost 100 of these, this kind of reception would have me very worried,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) wrote on Twitter about Greene’s experience in Dallas this Sunday. Greene seems likely to regain roles on committees in the new Congress. She was booted amid outrage about past comments including apparent support for physical violence against Democrats and conspiracy theories. With Republicans set to regain power in the House, Greene has also already spoken in decisive terms against providing any further aid to Ukraine, although it’s not any single member of Congress’s decision.