Marjorie Taylor Greene files motion to vacate House Speaker Mike Johnson
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stunned House lawmakers Friday by filing a motion to vacate against Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), a source told The Post.
Greene (R-Ga.) made the move as the House finalized passage of a partial government spending bill to avert a looming midnight shutdown — and fewer than six months after House Republicans ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) for passing an earlier federal funding measure.
Greene, 49, told reporters on the steps of the US Capitol following the vote that the latest funding bill was “a complete betrayal of all of our values” but declining to say whether she had “a timeline” for an eventual vote on Johnson’s ouster.

“I have support on this from others in my conference,” she claimed, declining to say the exact number. “I’m not introducing this to throw the House into chaos — committees will continue doing their work, investigations will continue.”
“We need a speaker of the House that knows how to negotiate, knows how to walk in the room, knows how to hold the line and knows how to defend ‘America First’ and the values and the policies that President Trump will bring,” she added.
“Speaker Johnson always listens to the concerns of members, but is focused on governing,” said Raj Shah, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff. “He will continue to push conservative legislation that secures our border, strengthens our national defense and demonstrates how we’ll grow our majority.”
The motion to declare the chair vacant is not under privilege, meaning it can’t be called at the earliest until after the House returns from its spring recess April 9.