Skip to content
Search

Rep. Crockett Says MTG Was ‘Absolutely’ Racist During Confrontation in House Hearing

Rep. Crockett Says MTG Was ‘Absolutely’ Racist During Confrontation in House Hearing

Rep. Jasmine Crockett has zero regrets about her heated exchange with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene during a House committee hearing last week, telling CNN that Greene’s insult about Crockett’s appearance was “absolutely” racist.

“Do you think her going after your eyelashes, that that, in itself, is racist?” State of the Union host Jake Tapper asked Crockett on Sunday.


“I think her specifically doing it to me, yes, that was the intent,” Crockett said. “Women wear makeup, we wear lashes, we wear all types of things to beautify ourselves. But MAGA has historically been on social media doing the things where they’re saying, ‘Oh, she’s black with lashes and nails and hair, and so she’s ghetto.’ And so, to me, this was her buying into that rhetoric and trying to amplify this for the MAGA crowd. And so, yes, I absolutely think that she only did it to be racist towards me.”

“It is buying into a racist trope,” Crockett added. “But the reality is that women of all colors wear lashes.”

The confrontation occurred in a House Oversight Committee meeting Thursday where members were voting whether to hold Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress for refusing to give Republicans audio recordings of President Joe Biden being interviewed by special counsel Robert Hur.

During the hearing, Greene went off topic, demanding to know if any Democrats were working with the daughter of Judge Juan Merchan, the judge presiding over Trump’s ongoing criminal trial.

“Please tell me what that has to do with Merrick Garland. Do you know what we’re here for? You know we’re here about AG Garland?” Crockett asked Greene.

Greene snarked that Crockett’s “fake eyelashes are messing up what you’re reading.”

Democrats — including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — jumped to Crockett’s defense and demanded that Greene’s comments be stricken, but Republicans voted to keep the comments on the congressional record.

That’s when Crockett jumped in, asking a hypothetical question of Republican Committee Chair James Comer that included a indirect burn against Greene. “I’m just curious, just to better understand your ruling,” Crockett said. “If someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody’s bleach blonde, bad built, butch body, that would not be engaging in personalities, correct?”

On CNN, Crockett accused Republicans of refusing to punish Greene for insulting her because Comer was worried he wouldn’t have enough votes to move the contempt motion forward without the Georgia congresswoman.

“The source of the chaos is always Marjorie Taylor Greene,” Crockett said Sunday.

When Tapper asked Crockett whether she regretted her comments, she was clear that she does not. “I don’t, because here’s the thing. I signed up to be a member of Congress. That didn’t mean that I was supposed to walk into a position where I’m going to walk in and be disrespected,” Crockett said.

“It’s already a hostile work environment being there, and we do have rules,” she continued. “The problem with MAGA is that MAGA does not respect rules, nor do they respect the law. That is exactly why they’re all running up to Trump’s trial, because he’s in trouble not because of some big conspiracy by the Biden administration. He’s in trouble because he fails to respect the law.”

Crockett also pointed out that she did not specifically name Greene in her attack. She said she was looking to understand the rules of the committee and what Comer would and would not allow.

“So what are the parameters? And I generally wanted to know,” Crockett said. “So I did not state anything to her. I specifically asked a question. And I didn’t even mention her name. It was for clarification, and that’s what I asked for. And he obviously didn’t hear me.”

“Yes, and I hear that,” Tapper said. “But she went after your appearance… You went back at her 1,000-fold.”

“I did,” Crockett said, “in a very lawyerly way.”

More Stories

Top Trump Official Resigns Over Iran War: ‘No Imminent Threat’

Joe Kent, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, testifies on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2025.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

Top Trump Official Resigns Over Iran War: ‘No Imminent Threat’

The director of the National Counterterrorism Center resigned from his post on Tuesday in protest of Donald Trump’s ongoing war against Iran. Joe Kent, a former Army Ranger and CIA paramilitary officer, announced that he “cannot in good conscience support” the war, and that Iran was not an imminent threat to the United States, which the president and his administration have claimed in order to justify attacking the nation.

“Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby,” Kent wrote in a statement released through his office and circulated on social media. “As a veteran who deployed to combat 11 times and as a Gold Star husband who lost my beloved wife Shannon in a war manufactured by Israel, I cannot support sending the next generation off to fight and die in a war that serves no benefit to the American people nor justifies the cost of American lives.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Trump Says Iran War Is Both ‘Very Complete’ But Also Just ‘the Beginning’

President Donald Trump at the Republican Members Issues Conference in Florida on March 9, as the war in Iran continues

Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images

Trump Says Iran War Is Both ‘Very Complete’ But Also Just ‘the Beginning’

As the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran escalates, President Donald Trump and his Cabinet have offered a litany of dizzying updates on the conflict.

During a phone interview with CBS News on Monday, Trump said the war with Iran is “very complete, pretty much.” Speaking from his Doral, Florida, golf club, the president claimed “[Iran has] no navy, no communications, they’ve got no air force. Their missiles are down to a scatter. Their drones are being blown up all over the place, including their manufacturing of drones.” He added, “If you look, they have nothing left. There’s nothing left in a military sense.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Trump Fires Kristi Noem, Taps Oklahoma Senator to Lead DHS

Kristi Noem testifies before the House Judiciary Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on March 4, 2026 in Washington, D.C.

Heather Diehl/Getty Images

Trump Fires Kristi Noem, Taps Oklahoma Senator to Lead DHS

After weeks of public scrutiny, personal scandal, and bad press over her handling of the Department of Homeland Security, President Donald Trump has fired Secretary Kristi Noem, tapping Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin as her potential replacement.

Noem is the first member of Trump’s second-term Cabinet to be removed from their position. In a statement posted to Truth Social on Thursday, Trump wrote that he was “pleased to announce that the Highly Respected United States Senator from the Great State of Oklahoma, Markwayne Mullin, will become the United States Secretary of Homeland Security (DHS), effective March 31, 2026.”

Keep ReadingShow less
The Terrifying New Era of American Imperialism
Illustration by Matthew Cooley. Photographs in illustration by Celal Gunes/Anadolu/Getty Images; Getty Images; Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Terrifying New Era of American Imperialism

In 2017, I published a book called, Move Fast and Break Things: How Facebook, Google and Amazon Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy. For the next year, I lived mostly in transit around the world — 50 cities, dozens of stages, endless conversations about how the tech empires had bent our culture out of shape, numbed public life, and hollowed out the foundations of democracy.

It was outside the United States, though, that the dissonance struck most deeply. I remember sitting on high-speed trains that glided so fast and silently they seemed to erase distance itself, watching wind farms cross the horizon like silent fleets. In country after country — places far smaller and, on paper, far poorer than ours — I kept asking the same question: how could they manage to build what we could not? Why did the richest nation on earth feel like it was living off the leftovers of its mid-twentieth century optimism?

Keep ReadingShow less
War Is Peace: Trump’s Regime-Change Reversal

War Is Peace: Trump’s Regime-Change Reversal

As American and Israeli rockets fly into Tehran, with the stated goal of regime change, anyone who bought into the self-evidently absurd idea of “Donald the Dove” ending America’s forever wars ought to be suffering from a bloody form of buyer’s remorse.

It was always bullshit. But that’s what the Trump team was selling hard. Take human ghoul Stephen Miller’s tweet days before the election: “Kamala = WWIII. Trump = Peace.”

Keep ReadingShow less