
MTG’s exit from Congress was a surprise. But this blows that right out of the water.
Because Marjorie Taylor Greene is in deep trouble after she was reported to Secret Service.
White House Staffers Refer Greene to Secret Service Over Alleged Leak
White House staffers referred former Republican Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to the Secret Service, suspecting she may have leaked details of President Donald Trump’s unannounced dinner plans at Joe’s Seafood in Washington, D.C., in fall 2025 to protesters from Code Pink, according to a report.
Two sources on Trump’s team told Axios that Greene had recommended the restaurant and made repeated calls to confirm Trump’s attendance that day. Greene did not attend the dinner, which aides found unusual.
The suspicions also stemmed from Greene’s known associations with Code Pink co-founder Medea Benjamin, with whom she shares opposition to U.S. military aid for Ukraine and Israel. A December 2025 photo posted by Benjamin on X showed the two together, with Benjamin stating, “We visited Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene today to thank her for becoming such a strong anti war voice in congress and tell her we will miss her.”
The referral occurred amid heightened security concerns following a 2024 assassination attempt on Trump. White House officials did not provide specific evidence to Axios linking Greene to the leak, and it remains unclear if the Secret Service is investigating her.
The incident reportedly strained Trump’s relationship with Greene, a former ally who resigned from Congress on January 5, 2026, midway through her third term.
Protesters Disrupt Trump’s Dinner Outing
The September 9, 2025, dinner at Joe’s Seafood included Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and several cabinet members, intended to highlight improved safety in D.C. due to National Guard deployments.
Code Pink protesters approached Trump’s table, chanting, “Free DC.! Free Palestine! Trump is the H-tler of our time!” The plans were shared only with a small group, and the media was not informed in advance.
Trump aides investigated how the protesters learned of the event, leading Trump to call for a probe into Code Pink, stating, “they should be put in jail.” Rep. Anna Paulina Luna demanded an investigation into the potential leak.
Trump’s team met with Secret Service leaders to review the confrontation and his security protocols.
Code Pink has faced scrutiny over alleged ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), based on a 2023 House Committee on Natural Resources investigation citing a New York Times report that the group receives funding from Neville Roy Singham, who reportedly works closely with Chinese government media to advance the CCP’s agenda.
Denials and Counterclaims from Greene and Others
Greene denied the allegations on X, calling the report a lie motivated by White House resentment over her efforts to release Jeffrey Epstein-related files and her criticisms of Trump.
She stated, “This is exactly what I told this little WH tool that wrote this absurd dangerous LIE about me on behalf of the WH because they are mad at me for telling the truth about the President and forcing the release of the Epstein files. Now they are making up horrific lies about me!!”
Code Pink spokesperson Melissa Garriga told Axios, “That absolutely did not happen, to the point it is comical.”
A source familiar with the situation told the Daily Caller that Greene did not communicate regularly with Benjamin—only occasional office greetings—and emphasized that the White House handled the reservations, suggesting any leak likely originated from staff there.
The source added, “Marjorie does not communicate with Medea Benjamin. Like outside she doesn’t communicate with her. Medea would come into the office occasionally, and Marjorie would say hi, but it wasn’t like they weren’t best buds,” and “The White House sets up all of those reservations, they’re the only people who would have been able to tip it off. It would have been like a White House staffer or some crazy liberal who works at Joe’s who hates the president.”
The Daily Caller reached out to the White House, Secret Service, and Code Pink for comment but did not receive responses prior to publication.

















