NEED TO KNOW
U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and journalist Brian Glenn are engaged.
The Real America’s Voice journalist, 56, announced the couple’s engagement in an X post on Monday, Dec. 15. Glenn uploaded a photo of Greene showing off her new engagement ring at Joe’s Seafood, Prime Steak & Stone Crab in Washington D.C.
“She said ‘yes’. 💍 ,” he captioned the post.
Greene, 51, reposted the photo to her X profile and wrote: “Happily ever after!!! ❤️ I love you @brianglenntv!!!”
Marjorie Taylor Greene/X
“This is something we’ve been talking about for a while,” Glenn told the Daily Mail. “I look forward to this new chapter in both our lives.”
The couple met in 2022 and began dating in 2023 after they each filed for divorce from their previous spouses.
Greene was previously married to Perry Greene for 27 years, and they share three children, Lauren, Derek and Taylor. Glenn was formerly married to Kerry Michelle Glenn.
Days before their engagement, Glenn and Greene were profiled by The Washington Post, and Glenn said an engagement was imminent, saying, “I see that in the future for sure.”
“People don’t see the side of Marjorie that I do,” he said in the Dec. 10 profile. “When you take her out of politics, she’s sweet. She’s sweet!”
Chip Somodevilla/Getty
Glenn also told the Post he would be leaving his role as Real America’s Voice White House correspondent when Greene leaves Congress to return to Georgia next month. Greene announced on Nov. 21 that she would resign as representative for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District on Jan. 5.
“Well, I gotta go with ‘Mom’ here,” he told the Post. “I’m not doing this fly-back-and-forth thing — not doing it, it’s not worth it.”
“I’ll do whatever content from there — either contribute to the network or do something else as well, another show or something,” he said of his role with Real America’s Voice, adding that the organization is building him a studio in Georgia.
“I will continue to support the president — I want to make sure that’s in the piece,” he said.
Glenn’s statement comes after months of escalating tensions between Greene and President Donald Trump.
Greene’s split from Trump this fall has been months in the making. In June, she broke with her party to oppose artificial intelligence (AI) provisions in Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” and admitted she never read the legislation. She also opposed Trump’s decision to bomb three Iranian nuclear sites that same month.
Greene also pushed repeatedly for the release of the Epstein files, despite the president’s prior opposition to the documents being made public. On Nov. 19, Trump said that he’d signed legislation ordering the files’ release, though they are due to be released by Friday, Dec. 19.
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In her resignation announcement, she criticized the political gridlock and partisanship that she says have impeded her ability to achieve her legislative goals.
Greene went on to criticize her fellow Republicans for their participation in the longest government shutdown in American history, and touted her conservative voting record on issues like gun rights and abortion, border security and “COVID tyrannical insanity.”
