Marjorie Taylor Greene calls Trump's attacks on her a "very poor reflection on him"
The conservative firebrand, who is retiring from Congress early, and the president are engaged in bitter falling-out.
Watch CBS News
The conservative firebrand, who is retiring from Congress early, and the president are engaged in bitter falling-out.
Democrat Eric Gisler is claiming victory in a Republican state House district in Georgia.
Georgia's State Election Board is considering a rule to define when emergency hand-marked paper ballots are needed instead of machine-marked ones.
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is set to testify on Dec. 17 before a special Georgia Senate committee.
State Sen. John F. Kennedy is resigning from his seat immediately to focus on campaigning to be Georgia's next lieutenant governor.
State Sen. Colton Moore says he is running to fill the seat left empty when Marjorie Taylor Greene steps down next year.
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is the latest Republican candidate for Georgia governor to attack campaign finance rules that allow Lt. Gov. Burt Jones to raise unlimited contributions.
The son of Martin Luther King Jr. says he's "beyond disappointed" by the National Park Service's decision to end free admission on MLK Day and Juneteenth.
President Trump said Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is "not AMERICA FIRST or MAGA" and also attacked "60 Minutes" and Paramount in a social media post.
Democrats are looking to win back the Georgia governor's office after decades of GOP control.
President Trump and more than a dozen of his allies were charged with offenses in Georgia relating to the 2020 presidential election.
Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia has announced she will resign from Congress on January 5, 2026.
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia announced on X Friday she will resign from Congress early next year, after a weekslong falling-out with President Trump and much of her party.
The House Ethics Committee is reviewing a complaint against U.S. Rep. Mike Collins and his chief of staff.
Multiple CDC officials familiar with the situation said the change was made by political appointees without input from relevant agency staffers.