In an article in the Sunday, April 18 issue of the National Archives, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (D-CA) is preparing to introduce a resolution to expel Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) from the House of Representatives because Waters endorsed the use of riots and violence to achieve political goals during an interview at the scene of Saturday’s riots, comments that may have led to the shooting of a National Guard soldier by a mob early Sunday morning.
Rep. Greene wrote, “Soon, I will introduce a resolution to expel Rep. Waters from Congress for her continued incitement to violence against innocent American people. Congresswoman Waters is a danger to our society. After traveling across state lines to incite riots, her order was caught on video last night in Brooklyn Center, directly leading to violence and a drive-by shooting of National Guardsmen in Minnesota early this morning.”
In an interview with the radical left-wing Unicorn Riots on Saturday, April 17, as civil unrest continued in the Minneapolis, Minnesota, area, Waters said that in order to achieve a guilty verdict in the high-profile case, “we have to stay in the streets, we have to be more aggressive, more confrontational, and we have to make sure they know we mean business.”
Early Sunday morning, less than a day after Waters publicly incited violence on the streets of central Brooklyn, a member of the National Guard stationed in the area was killed by a mob’s drive-by shooting in a city just 15 minutes from downtown Minneapolis and 10 minutes from the death of suspected fraudster and convicted felon George Floyd.
Greene writes, “As a sitting U.S. Congresswoman, Waters threatened the jury with a guilty verdict and threatened violence if Officer Shovan was found not guilty. This is an abuse of power.”
After the mostly peaceful Capitol Hill protests on Jan. 6, Democrats moved to expel Greene from Congress, claiming she had incited a riot. Greene eventually smoothed over the political drama, and even while banned from using Twitter, Rep. Greene developed one of the largest fundraising programs in the Republican Party.
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