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Trump’s Secret Service Drama: Is Political Policing on the Rise?

They say politics makes strange bedfellows, but this latest maneuver from the Trump White House smells more like political policing than party discipline. Axios reports that White House officials actually contacted the Secret Service about former congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene after an unannounced dinner in Washington was disrupted by protesters — a stunning development that should make every patriot uneasy about the weaponization of security.

Here are the facts the media can’t seem to stop breathlessly spinning: President Trump dined at Joe’s Seafood on September 9, 2025, a small group from Code Pink confronted his table, and the White House later wondered how the protesters knew about the reservation. Axios and local outlets recount that Greene had recommended the restaurant and even called White House staffers the day of the dinner, sparking suspicion among aides who now claim she might have tipped off the demonstrators.

Greene angrily denies the allegation — pointing the finger back at the restaurant and the administration for failing to sweep the venue — and Code Pink itself says it did not get its information from her. The Secret Service declined to comment publicly about any inquiry, which leaves this most explosive claim hovering on innuendo rather than hard evidence. Patriots deserve proof before trust in our security institutions is used as a cudgel against internal critics.

Make no mistake: this is not a trivial tiff between two MAGA personalities. It’s emblematic of a broader problem — the leader who once celebrated Greene’s firebrand style now appears ready to sic law-enforcement-adjacent agencies on a former ally as retribution for political disagreement. Greene’s resignation and public falling-out with Trump over Epstein files and foreign policy only underlines how quickly loyalty in Washington is replaced by expediency.

The conservative movement must reject the normalization of anonymous leaks and security inquiries used to settle scores. Media outlets are all too eager to inflate suspicions into scandals without producing evidence, and political teams are all too happy to let institutions protect political reputations instead of protecting the people. If this story teaches us anything, it’s that we cannot allow our security services to be bent into tools for intra-party purges or score-settling.

Marjorie Taylor Greene has spent years fighting for transparency on matters big and ugly, from Epstein files to foreign-policy questions, and she insists she would never risk anyone’s safety. Conservatives should demand a full accounting of who knew what and when, not accept whispered suspicions as truth. Stand with the principle that evidence, not vendettas, should guide any inquiry into the behavior of a public figure.

Written by Staff Reports

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