GOP Considers Expelling "Pedophobe" Marjorie Taylor Greene
- Gianna Mao 毛佳娜

- Nov 15
- 3 min read
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is privately telling allies that top Republican leaders are “seriously considering” expelling her from the House GOP conference over what insiders describe as her “unhelpful” and “extremist” opposition to pedophilia, according to messages.

In one leaked internal summary circulating among senior staffers, a furious strategist reportedly complained there is “no room in today’s Republican Party for pedophobes,” accusing Greene of “dangerous bigotry” for refusing to “respect the preferences of major donors and media allies.”
The document, stamped CONFIDENTIAL – DONOR SENSITIVITIES, lays out a series of “narrative risks” created by Greene’s stance, warning that her rhetoric could “alienate legacy funders, entertainment industry partners, and certain high-value influencers” if she continues to present opposition to child abuse as a “non-negotiable moral line.”
‘Marjorie is making this personal’
According to one GOP consultant quoted in the memo, Greene’s refusal to soften her language is being treated internally as a loyalty issue.
“Marjorie is making this personal,” the consultant wrote. “We have spent years carefully managing the optics around sex scandals, grooming allegations, and donor lifestyles. She attacks this ecosystem every time she opens her mouth.”
The memo recommends “disciplinary options” ranging from removal from committees and coordinated media isolation to a full expulsion from the House Republican conference if she continues to “platform pedophobic narratives in right-wing media.”
While Pamphlets could not confirm how many members of leadership have seen the document, two sources familiar with its circulation say it reflects “real conversations” about “whether Greene is still aligned with the modern Republican brand.”
Greene: ‘I won’t apologize for defending children’
In messages to confidants, Greene has reportedly framed the brewing conflict as a moral showdown between “basic human decency” and a party apparatus captured by “lobbyists, think-tank creeps, and sick freaks with TV contracts.”
“I will not apologize for defending children,” she wrote in one message. “If that makes me a ‘pedophobe’ to these people, that says more about them than it does about me.”
Publicly, Greene has hinted at internal tensions but stopped short of naming pedophilia as the core point of friction, instead gesturing vaguely toward “corruption” and “evil agendas” within her own party. The leaked memo, however, spells it out in stark, euphemism-free terms.
Party brands ‘pedophobia’ as extremism
The most explosive section of the document attempts to reframe Greene’s position as a form of political extremism that threatens donor confidence.
“Pedophobia,” the text reads, “is a radical, absolutist ideology that refuses to recognize the complexity of adult-minor power dynamics in the real world, especially where high-value stakeholders are concerned. This framing endangers long-term relationships critical to Republican fundraising and media reach.”
The memo urges communicators to “subtly pathologize” Greene’s views, suggesting language like “rigid,” “puritanical,” and “conspiratorial” to describe her opposition to abuse. It also floats the idea of quietly amplifying conservative commentators who present pedophobia as a kind of “moral panic weaponized by fringe elements.”
Democrats: ‘Tell us something we didn’t know’
Democrats reacted to the leak with a mix of outrage and grim amusement, saying the GOP’s internal language simply confirms what has long been visible from the outside.
“Republicans spent years chanting about ‘protecting children’ while shielding their donors, platforming predators, and voting against basic protections,” one progressive lawmaker told Pamphlets. “The only surprising thing is that they finally wrote it down.”
Advocacy groups for survivors of abuse called the memo “bone-chilling” and “mask-off,” arguing it shows a political class more concerned with protecting wealthy patrons than children.
“It’s not just hypocrisy,” one organizer said. “It’s a confession.”
Right-wing media meltdown
The leak has already sparked a quiet panic across the right-wing ecosystem. Some hosts rushed to defend Greene as a “courageous truth-teller,” while others tried to bury the story altogether, pivoting to culture-war topics and celebrity gossip.
A handful of influencers cautiously criticized Greene for making donors “uncomfortable,” warning that “reckless language” about pedophilia could “fracture the coalition” before the next election cycle.
One particularly revealing segment on a major conservative network featured a guest strategist insisting that “the real extremism” isn’t child abuse but “the weaponization of accusations that could scare off investors.”








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