Republican firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is set to make a high-profile appearance on The View next week.
Host Whoopi Goldberg announced the news Thursday morning as the panel discussed the ongoing government shutdown and the latest political turmoil in Washington.
“People in Washington are starting to say ‘my constituents.’ You know, they’re starting to remember why they’re there,” Whoopi said, applauding lawmakers for supposedly finding their purpose again. “Because you don’t get there without people putting you there.”
Goldberg remarked that Greene has been emphasizing that message repeatedly in recent weeks — before going on to make the announcement of her upcoming appearance.
“I’m happy to say that she’s gonna be here on Tuesday,” Whoopi told viewers and the studio audience.
“I don’t know how many things we agree on, but I know the one thing she and I, and all of us at this table agree on, is this should not be affecting the American people,” she added.
Greene’s upcoming appearance comes only weeks after the show’s hosts complained that Republican lawmakers seldom accept their invitations — and often avoid appearing altogether.
The Georgia Republican also confirmed that she would be appearing on the program in an X post, while hitting back at GOP critics who ripped her for appearing on The View and with liberal comedian Bill Maher.
“There are pathetic Republican men (mostly paid social media influencers) attacking me for going on Bill Maher’s show and The View,” she wrote. “Here is my voting card and nothing has changed about me, I’m 1,000,000% America ONLY.
“Sorry I’m not sorry I don’t obey Republican men’s demands that I, as a woman, don’t remain seen but not heard,” she added.
In September, Greene issued a cryptic message when she publicly declared that she is “not suicidal,” while warning that Americans should demand answers if “foreign governments or powerful people” attempt to interfere with her efforts to expose information about Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking network and the political establishment she alleges shielded it.
Greene, alongside Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), has pledged to release the names of individuals tied to Epstein’s crimes once a group of victims delivers a list to Congress.
Earlier in the month, Greene, Massie, and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) hosted Epstein survivors at a press conference where victims spoke publicly, some for the first time, urging the government to provide accountability, transparency, and justice.
Massie (R-KY) filed a discharge petition in an effort to bring the Epstein Transparency Act to a full vote on the House floor.
The legislation seeks to require the Department of Justice to release nearly all documents tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, with personal identifying information of victims redacted.
Greene publicly endorsed the petition on X, signaling her support for the measure.
“To be clear to set the record straight on my support for the Massie Epstein discharge petition,” Greene wrote.
“I stand with girls and women who are sexually abused and raped. Period. Every time. At all times. For me, it’s not about a pissing contest between political parties or political enemies. The Epstein rape and pedophile network must be exposed,” she added.
“The women and their attorney have said over and over that Donald Trump did nothing wrong and he was the only one that helped the women. That is factually true,” Greene continued. “Also, the Democrats who had power for the past four years never did a single thing or showed they even cared about these women who were victims of Jeffrey Epstein.
“They could have exposed the entire thing while they had power but never lifted a finger to do so,” she wrote.
Greene emphasized that those accused have the right to defend themselves and shared her own experience of clearing her name.