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On Feb. 2, 2021, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell reportedly said that Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene accepted loony lies and conspiracy theories that were a cancer for the Republican party. Greene, who is a Republican, is a known QAnon supporter and conspiracy theorist who has come under fire for expressing fringe beliefs and racist views since winning the U.S. House seat representing northwest Georgia in November 2020. In a statement reportedly sent to the news outlet The Hill, McConnell, a Republican from Kentucky, said the following: Snopes contacted McConnell’s press team to confirm whether or not the above statement was, in fact, sent to the news organization and if so, to verify whether McConnell was referencing opinions expressed by Greene. We did not receive a response at the time of publication. Though McConnell never explicitly mentioned the freshman Republican, the statements he alluded to have been linked back to Greene and some of her supporters. In January 2021, a video of Greene surfaced showing the lawmaker confronting David Hogg, a former Stoneman Douglas High School student and survivor of the mass shooting there, harassing him over his calls for gun legislation. Greene has also spread false claims suggesting that the shootings at a high school in Parkland, Florida, and the Sandy Hook Elementary School were hoaxes, that John F. Kennedy Jr.’s death in a 1999 plane crash was an assassination that paved the way for Hillary Clinton’s New York Senate Seat, and something other than a plane flew into the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. These views and other unfounded claims were shared in a 2018 YouTube interview. Greene fired back on Twitter in a Feb. 1 post that called out weak Republicans, which some news outlets speculated to be a direct jab at McConnell.
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