Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Resigning. Here’s What Happens Now.

WASHINGTON—Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene caused a stir on Saturday when she announced her plans to resign effective January 5. Now, with Republicans struggling to hold on to a barely-there majority, the question is: what will happen to her seat?

A special is slated to happen sometime in February or March. And with just 219 seats, Republicans can’t afford to lose it. There are currently three vacancies in the House: two seats left open by Democrats, one by a Republican, and Greene will with be the fourth when she resigns. The seven-seat margin means Republicans can afford no more than three defections on measures they want to pass without Democrats.

Greene, who rose to prominence as one of President Donald Trump’s most vocal allies, announced her resignation amid a very public fallout with the president over his resistance to releasing information related to the convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. In a video announcement posted on Nov. 21, Greene outlined the reasoning behind her decision and addressed her decision to support releasing the Epstein files.

“Standing up for American women who were raped at 14, trafficked and used by rich powerful men, should not result in me being called a traitor and threatened by the President of the United States, whom I fought for,” Greene said.

Greene also pointed to other frustrations, saying she believes Americans are being “used” by the “political industrial complex” on both sides to “elect whichever side can convince Americans to hate the other side more.”

This week, Greene confirmed she is not running for president, or joining “The View,” as many people online have speculated in recent days since her announcement.

Paulding County Republican Party Executive Committee Chairman Richard J. Hess told The Daily Wire there will be a special election to fill Greene’s unexpired term for 2025.

The timeline, however, is a little tricky.

Hess said the special election to replace the conservative firebrand will likely fall “somewhere between mid-February and March, but ultimately that decision is up to the governor.” Once Greene resigns, the governor will have 10 days to issue the call for a special election, formally known as a “a writ of election,” according to the Secretary of State’s office website.

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A spokesman for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger told The Daily Wire that once this happens, a special election must be at least 29 days from the call being issued. Hess said their hope is that the special election “doesn’t interfere with the primary or the qualification period, because we’re looking at very tight timelines.”

Hess explained that there will be a special election and “potentially” a runoff election, followed by the regular primary cycle for the seat. Greene’s seat is up for election in November 2026, meaning the winner of this special election would have to run again if they want to retain the seat.

The general primary for the 2026 election is scheduled for May 19 with a potential runoff June 16, according to the Federal Election Commission’s website. Georgia is one of the seven states that requires a runoff election if none of the candidates receive a majority of the vote (50%+1), according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

This means the process could take longer if a runoff election is required, depending on how many candidates enter the race and the election results.

“It’s going to be a very hectic, fast-paced period, and we’re just hoping the transition moves as smoothly as possible,” Hess said.

Georgia’s 14th Congressional District is a solidly Republican district in the state’s northwest corner. In the 2024 race, Greene reportedly secured around 64% of the vote, compared to 35% for her Democratic challenger, Shawn Harris.

Mamdani Names ‘End Of Policing’ Author Who Called Cops ‘Violence Workers’ To Transition Team

Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani (D-NYC) raised eyebrows with a recent addition to his transition team: sociology professor and author of “The End of Policing,” Alex Vitale.

Mamdani had to dial back his own anti-police rhetoric during his mayoral campaign, apologizing to New York City police officers for previous comments when prompted by Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum, but his selection of Vitale appears to be a sign that he’s reverting back to his original positions.

I’m excited to announce that I have been asked to join the Mamdani Transition Team to work on community safety issues. A New Era for NYC,” Vitale announced via X on Sunday.

As critics quickly pointed out, Vitale’s position has always been decidedly anti-cop. His book, “The End of Policing,” imagines a word where “modern policing” is broadly replaced by a combination of decriminalization and community empowerment. He argues that policing is designed to reinforce inequality, and that giving police officers diversity training is not enough to bridge the gap.

He has called for the decriminalization of offenses such as prostitution and drug use, and advocates for private corporations or government programs that would provide permanent housing for the homeless population. In addition, he has repeatedly attacked Israel, claiming that Israelis are “occupying” land belonging to Palestinians — and tied that in to his negative views on policing as well, complaining that American police should not be training with Israelis: “I’m not happy with these exchanges of policing to Israel. Israel is engaged in an occupation.”

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Video circulated of Vitale, in an interview, referring to police as “violence workers” and adding, “if you don’t want racism and violence, don’t get the police involved.”

WATCH:

🚨 New Mamdani Transition Team Member Says Cops Are “Violence Workers” and NYPD–Israel Training Trips “Pervert American Politics”

Alex Vitale — author of The End of Policing, sociology professor at Brooklyn College, CUNY Graduate Center, and now officially part of Zohran… pic.twitter.com/n6REJNfbjH

— Stu Smith (@thestustustudio) November 24, 2025

The overall assessment, as shared by a number of people via X, is that Mamdani had simply reverted to the same anti-police, anti-Israel socialist that his opposition had spent the entire campaign warning people he was.

“The biggest risk of a Mamdani mayorship? Mass exodus from the NYPD. This occurred in SF under the radical left DA, Chesa Boudin. When police aren’t supported, they quit, retire early, or never join in the first place,” one posted.

“Huge step backwards for Mamdani. This guy wants to defund and abolish policing. You can find him wherever prep school lefties congregate, zero working class New Yorkers adhere to these ideas,” another added.

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