Marjorie Taylor Greene hit with FEC and House Ethics complaints over ad that blasts Senate Republican for voting for $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill

  • The progressive group End Citizens United filed two complaints Tuesday against Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene
  • The complaints are over an ad she stars in that slaps Senate Republicans for suporting the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill 
  • End Citizens United filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission accusing her of violating campaign finance laws 
  • The group argues Greene should have reported an in-kind contribution to her campaign when the ad ran on behalf of her leadership PAC 
  • End Citizens United also filed a complaint with the Office of Congressional Ethics saying Greene was doing official business with the ad 
  • The ad slams '19 cowardly Republicans' for voting for the bill and urges supporters to call Congress and ask House Republicans to vote against it  

The progressive group End Citizens United filed two complaints Tuesday against Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene over an ad she stars in that slaps Senate Republicans for supporting the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill. 

End Citizens United filed complaints with the Federal Elections Commission and the Office of Congressional Ethics claiming Greene violated campaign finance laws and also used her campaign committee and leadership PAC for official Congressional activities. 

'Congresswoman Greene has shown a blatant disregard for the law and is engaging in corrupt Washington practices,' said End Citizens United President Tiffany Muller in a statement Tuesday. 'Using her leadership PAC in an attempt to get around federal law and regulations is both unethical and illegal. Both the FEC and OCE should immediately begin an investigation and hold her accountable for her self-serving and shady practices.'   
The progressive group End Citizens United filed two complaints Tuesday against Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene over an ad she stars in that slaps Senate Republicans for supporting the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill

The progressive group End Citizens United filed two complaints Tuesday against Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene over an ad she stars in that slaps Senate Republicans for supporting the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill

The ad in question features Greene calling out '19 cowardly Republicans' for joining Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Senate Democrats to vote for the bill, which passed the Senate 69-30 in August. 

'It's really the first step of Biden's communization of America,' Greene says. 

'Now it goes to the House where Republicans need to stay united and stop this bill,' she continues. 

Greene warns that the infrastructure bill is attached to the $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill that she says promotes 'woke identity politics' and 'AOC's pro-China Green New Deal.'

'It's time for Republicans to stay united, stand strong and vote no,' Greene says, as the number of the Congressional switchboard flashes on-screen. 

The ad, created in August, aired on television as an ad paid for and approved by her campaign committee. 

A month later, Greene's leadership PAC - Save America Stop Socialiam PAC - aired a nearly identical ad.  

The only difference between the two spots was the disclaimer at the end, which originally said Greene approved of the ad, but later said SASS PAC was responsible for the content of the ad.  

End Citizens United argues in the FEC complaint that when a leadership PAC pays for 'coordinated communications' with the campaign, the campaign must report an in-kind contribution. 

Additionally, the contribution cannot exceed $5,000 per election cycle.   

'Greene's campaign committee violated campaign finance laws when they did not report her leadership PAC’s TV ad as an in-kind contribution,' the Tuesday release from Ends Citizens United said. 

The complaint filed with the Office of Congressional Ethics accuses Greene of using her campaign committee and leadership PAC for official Congressional activities as she's lobbying against a specific piece of legislation in the spot. 

'Under federal law, members of Congress cannot use outside sources of money to fund their official government activities,' the release from End Citizens United explained. 

'By airing ads paid for by her principal campaign committee and her leadership PAC that explicitly opposed a specific piece of legislation and lobbied supporters against the bill, Congresswoman Greene violated those provisions of federal law and House rules,' it said.  

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