Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is exploring her future career options as she considers a campaign for Senate, according to a Friday report.

She is actively considering a campaign to be the Republican nominee for Senate if popular Gov. Brian Kemp, nearing the end of his second term, decides not to seek the job, The Daily Caller reported.

The firebrand representative is said to believe that she would “crush” the competition in the GOP primary if Kemp is not one of the contenders.

“Greene’s potential candidacy for incumbent Democratic Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff’s seat would put the conservative congresswoman at the center of one of the most closely watched races of 2026. Republicans are laser-focused on defeating Ossoff, whose narrow victory over former Republican Georgia Sen. David Perdue in a January 2021 runoff election was partly responsible for costing Senate Republicans their majority during the 2020 cycle,” the report said.

The Republican field is currently frozen, as Kemp has not yet announced his intentions, the Caller added.

The contest is thought to be a tough one for Ossoff, as President Donald Trump won Georgia in the 2024 presidential election by a wide margin.

That is also good news for Greene, as she has close ties with the president, who would likely campaign on her behalf.

The polls show that she would have a tougher road than Kemp, but they also indicated she would be the only other Republican candidate who could avoid a runoff election.

By Georgia law, if no primary candidate secures 50 percent of the vote, the top two candidates engage in a runoff election to determine the candidate.

“Whoever is in the runoff is beating the hell out of each other and going into debt,” a source said.

That would give a distinct advantage to Ossoff, who would likely cruise to the nomination unchallenged and be able to bank funds for the general election campaign.

“Ossoff, a prolific fundraiser, took in an eyebrow-raising $11 million between January and March 2025, the largest haul for an incumbent in the first quarter of an off-year, according to Politico. The senator does not currently have any declared Democratic primary opponents and has been taunting Greene to jump into the race,” the report said.

The Republican representative confirmed to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that she is considering a campaign for Senate.

“Of course I’m considering all possibilities,” she said. “No decisions have been made, but I would be telling a lie if I didn’t say I wasn’t considering it.”

That said, Greene offered praise to Kemp in the same interview. “I think Governor Kemp is a really solid candidate,” she said.

One person said they believe Greene could sail to the nomination if Kemp remains on the sidelines.

“I think if she got in tomorrow, she’d raise millions of dollars online in the first week,” a source said. “If I was one of the other members of Congress that was looking at the race, I would not be fired up about running against her.”

The Republican representative has been engaged in recent months in a feud with Democrat Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who, some believe, threatened her with violence.

In an interview with washed-up former CNN host Don Lemon, Crockett appeared to suggest getting physical with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) after Lemon intimated that Crockett should worry about the Georgia Republican coming after her.

WATCH:

 

“Do you worry about her? I mean, do you think she would… she would never do anything physical, or maybe her supporters? I don’t know,” Lemon asked.

Crockett responded: “I don’t worry about her doing anything physical. People forget that I was a criminal defense attorney… Marjorie likes to talk a lot. Um, I don’t see her ever being physical at all. Plus, I think that she may be concerned about what I can do physically.”

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