
News Link • Congress-Congressmen
Marjorie Taylor Greene posted rifle photo after news of Minnesota lawmaker shootings. Here's con
• https://www.msn.com, by Jordan LilesRating:
True (About this rating?)
Context:
Greene, or a member of her staff, posted the picture on her official House representative social media pages, along with three other photos showing her participating in the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary event in Washington on the morning of June 14 — several hours after the shootings occurred. News had broken locally in Minnesota about the shootings at that hour, but many prominent national news outlets had not yet reported on them. A spokesman for Greene did not say whether she was aware of the shootings at the time. She later shared a post calling the shootings "horrific" and saying she was praying for victims' families and friends, adding, "Political violence must end in America."
A rumor that circulated online in June 2025 claimed U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., posted a photo on her official social media accounts showing her aiming a rifle soon after news broke of shootings involving Minnesota Democratic Party lawmakers. Snopes received reader mail asking, for example, "It's being shared on Facebook that Marjorie Taylor Greene posted a picture of herself firing an assault rifle in response to the news of the political assassinations in MN. Can you verify or debunk? Thanks." Another reader emailed, "Did MTG really post this right after the Minnesota assassinations?"
For example, on June 14 — the day of the shootings — a manager of the Feminist News Facebook page posted (archived) in part, "Minutes after news broke that two Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota were targeted for assassination in separate attacks, Marjorie Taylor Greene posted this." Users shared this rumor on Bluesky (archived), Facebook (archived), Threads (archived) and X (archived).
(Feminist News/Facebook)
It is true that Greene shared that photograph in the hours after the Minnesota shootings, but the timeline of her posts and the news about the shootings requires context.
Greene posted the picture, as well as three others, in support of the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary event, the commemoration featuring a military parade attended by President Donald Trump, held in Washington on June 14 — the same day as the shootings. She, or a member of her staff, shared the photos on social media after some news outlets, particularly those based in Minnesota, reported the early details of multiple targeted shootings. At the same time, her posts appeared before some prominent national outlets, including The Associated Press, Fox News, Reuters and others, broke the news of the victims' high-profile status as Democratic Party politicians and their spouses.