Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Children Are Inspiring Her Next Chapter To Fight for Home Affordability After Resigning From Congress
Two days after resigning from Congress, Marjorie Taylor Greene sat across from Whoopi Goldberg, Joy Behar, and the entire panel of "The View" to answer questions about her time in office and her next steps.
The conversation ranged from her connection to Nick Fuentes to the Epstein files, but when questioned about her next steps as a public figure, Greene remained firm that her focus was on the America First movement.
When asked by Sunny Hostin if her resignation was linked to a bid for a higher position like governor or even president, Greene was adamant that she had no political aspirations at this time.
“The narrative is wrong about me,” she said. “I’m not trying to climb the ladder. What matters to me most is being America first. What matters to me is using my voice to pull Americans on the right and left together to focus on our collective problems.”
Those problems, in her view, include American affordability, from groceries to housing. Of the latter, she admits that even her own children “look to the future and ask, ‘Will I ever be able to afford a home?’”
This platform was central to her work during the final months of her tenure as a congresswoman. Since the summer, Greene has pushed her policy, the No Tax on Home Sales Act. The proposal would eliminate the tax-free profit limits on the sale of a primary residence.
“I have a very centered focus on the American people and America first,” Greene told Realtor.com® in an exclusive interview in July 2025 shortly after announcing her proposal. “Since I’ve been in Congress, I’ve watched a lot of our tax dollars go overseas and go to special interest causes, while the American people continue to suffer and suffer and suffer.
“It’s completely against who we are as a country and as Americans to just continue to tax people to death,” she added.

How will Greene forward her housing agenda outside of Washington
When pressed about her next steps after Congress, Greene was adamant that she would spend more time with her family, including her mother, new fiancé, and three adult children.
She reiterated that part of her decision to leave politics was due to President Donald Trump’s attacks on her, including calling her a “traitor,” which reportedly resulted in death threats against her son.
“The toxic nature of politics is something that grew to bother me deeply,” she said, pointing to both sides of the aisle for their rhetoric.
“I never went to Washington to stay there for a big, long political career,” she added. “Politics is just so extreme and divisive. I don’t want to be a part of that.”
So what does that mean for the future of her housing policies?
That remains to be seen, but as the owner of her family construction company, she will continue to have a voice within the community.
Before appearing on "The View," she posted that her path forward included “erasing lines, boundaries, and breaking chains,” and encouraged her followers to do the same.
“The most important thing the American people can do is to hold your elected leaders accountable,” she posted on X.
“You elect them, your tax dollars pay for their government positions and jobs and fund the entire government and military that you gave them permission and power to run.”
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