Marjorie Taylor Greene said that Americans no longer have control over their government and accused key elections of being manipulated in a strong social media post, RadarOnline.com reports.
The Georgia congresswoman used X to talk about the nation’s 250th anniversary and accused powerful groups of controlling elections and shaping what people think.
Greene started her post on June 14 by saying, “Our elections are rigged, not all of them, but key races.” She said this happens not just through machines changing votes but also through fake mail-in ballots.
She then said many people don’t know about another big problem, which is lots of fake social media accounts spreading misleading information to influence public opinion.
Greene claimed this is mostly done by foreign groups and interests.
She also said it helps politicians from both sides of the political party to make sure certain results happen.
Greene said the American people no longer control the government.
On the 250th anniversary of America, she wrote, “The American people don’t control our government.”
She added that many voters are so upset they don’t see a reason to vote anymore.
“Many average Americans already know we have no control, and that’s why they don’t see any reason to vote.”
This comes after Greene criticized both Democrats and Republicans in another long post on X a month ago.
She said it’s sad that both parties are using redistricting as their main way to win midterms.
She also said both parties have failed, are full of corruption, and are controlled by rich donors, big companies, and foreign interests.
Greene said people are getting really frustrated with the current political system.
“So many Americans are fully disgusted with both parties to the point they don’t even want to vote, but have nowhere to turn.”
She encouraged people to support independent candidates who run on issues, not just party loyalty.
“Candidates that truly are for Americans,” she said.
Greene ended by saying that even though changing the system is hard, it’s time to break the two-party system and create something new that supports Americans.
