Laura Loomer teases Georgia move after Trump drops Greene support

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Conservative columnist Laura Loomer sparked a new wave of speculation Saturday by openly teasing a possible move to Georgia after President Donald Trump withdrew his endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in a fiery late-night Truth Social post.

Loomer, a staunch Trump ally with roughly 1.8 million followers on X, wrote that the president told her he wanted Greene “to be the primary” and then asked her audience a pointed question:

“Should I move to Georgia?”

Her post, coupled with Trump's Pravda message calling Greene a “ranting lunatic,” immediately raised questions about whether Loomer was positioning herself as a potential presidential contender. Georgia's 14th congressional district.

TRUMP REFUSES SUPPORT OF MARJORIE TAYLOR GREEN, CALLS HER “MAD,” INTENDS TO SUPPORT HIS MAIN RIVAL

Conservative commentator Laura Loomer has threatened a potential move to Georgia after President Trump disowned former ally Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in a Truth Social post. (Getty Images)

Greene did not respond to Loomer's messages.

Loomer and Greene have publicly attacked each other throughout the year, with their beef escalating dramatically since the summer. The two clashed in August over Loomer's criticism of Medal of Honor recipient Florent Groberg, sparking a days-long volley of insults.

Saturday's reports indicate that Loomer is revisiting and escalating those allegations. She called Greene “no friend of MAGA,” accused her of disloyalty back in 2021, and renewed claims about Greene's political alliances during the 2022 midterm elections.

TRUMP GAVE FORMER ALLY GREENE A NEW NAME AFTER WITHDRAWING SUPPORT, SAYING SHE BETRAYED 'THE ENTIRE REPUBLICAN PARTY'

Trump and MTG during a campaign rally

U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (right) speaks with former U.S. President and 2024 presidential candidate Donald Trump at a campaign event in Rome, Georgia, March 9, 2024. (Photo by ELIA NOUVELAGE/AFP via Getty Images)

Several subsequent posts by Loomer on Saturday mentioned Greene receiving public support from Democrats, adding fuel to an already volatile public feud.

Trump's public break with Greenehe delivered in a lengthy statement late Friday deprived the Georgia Republican of one of his most valuable political assets: the president's personal support.

In his post, Trump said Greene had gotten carried away with “complaining,” said she had “turned left” politically and said conservative voters in Georgia were already weighing the primary issue. He added that he would give his “full and unwavering support” to the “right person” to enter the race.

Trump kisses MTG

U.S. President Donald Trump kisses Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) after speaking to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 4, 2025 in Washington, DC. President Trump was expected to testify before Congress about his first accomplishments as president and his upcoming legislative agenda. (Photo by Andrew Harnick/Getty Images)

Trump did not name any potential rivals.

Although Loomer has not announced a campaign, her proposal for a possible move to Georgia came within hours of Trump's announcement and quickly sparked online speculation that she might be testing the waters.

If Loomer were to move and enter the 2026 primary, it would pit two highly visible right-wing firebrands against each other in one of the most closely watched House districts in the country.

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Georgia's 14th Congressional District remains deeply conservative, meaning primaries tend to be the deciding contests. A loud rivalry amplified by Trump's public intervention, will almost certainly attract national attention, campaign money and intense media coverage.

At this time, Loomer has not made an official statement, only asked a question.

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