In the thick darkness surrounding the Bedminster resort, the light from Donald Trump’s private conference room still spilled out into the hallway. Inside, the long wooden table held only two people: Trump at the head of the table, and Jeanine Pirro sitting diagonally beside him, a thick file in front of her.
On the spine of the red folder was a line Pirro had written in black marker:
“MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE – COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN FILE”
Trump raised an eyebrow and picked up the file.
“What is this, Jeanine?” he asked, his voice half curious, half annoyed.
Pirro leaned back in her chair, the confident air of someone who knew she had news to swallow but had to hear it.
“This is a summary,” she said slowly. “Internal polling in Georgia, interview transcripts, podcasts, tweets, TV appearances… it’s all been about Marjorie in the last few months. And it’s not the ‘MAGA warrior’ image you’ve been promoting.”
She turned to the first page: an internal survey. Cold numbers.
“When you don’t support her, she’s stuck in the low teens. A ‘just right’ primary candidate could smother her in her home district. And those Senate, Governorship adventures? Without you, the chances are close to zero.”

Trump looked at the numbers, his hand tapping lightly on the table. He had once boasted that a simple “Endorsed!” could get someone over the line. Now someone who had once relied on his brand was using part of that base to complain about him.
Pirro turned to the next set of pages—it was all quotes.
“Here she is complaining that you’re ‘too focused on foreign affairs,’ and can’t afford domestic affairs. Here she’s on a talk show where she’s almost in tune with the host on the left. Here she’s tweeting about you being more transparent about sensitive files, implicitly accusing you of being ‘surrounded by a swamp.’”
She paused, looking directly at Trump.
“Mr. President, this is no longer a disciplined comrade. This is an uncontrollable variable on your own front.”
Trump crossed his arms, leaned back in his chair. His eyes narrowed—not in an angry, explosive way, but a calculating, political stare.
“She was my biggest defender on the Hill,” he muttered. “Now she’s complaining, complaining, complaining…”
Pirro didn’t miss the cue.
“Exactly. And you know what your voters hate most? They hate feeling taken advantage of. They elected you—not to see a MAGA-branded congressman on CNN bitch about you.”
She pushed the file back toward him, concluding:
“You don’t owe her her seat. On the contrary, she owes you every microphone she has.”
The next morning, Truth Social exploded.

Trump’s account posted a lengthy statement, its tone both familiar and sharper than usual. He recounted sending polls to Marjorie Taylor Greene, suggesting she had no chance of jumping into the Senate or Governorship races. He criticized her for “ignoring victory,” and instead of attacking the other side, he “COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN!” about himself.
The part that exploded the most was when he described not picking up the phone with Greene:
“With 219 Representatives, 53 Senators, 24 Cabinet members, nearly 200 heads of state, and another life to lead, I can’t take the crazy calls of a lunatic every day.”
The word “lunatic” instantly became a meme.
Trump finished with a punch: he said he was willing to support a primary opponent in Greene’s home district, if “the right person” came along – and Greene would absolutely not get an endorsement.
The MAGA world was shocked. A man who had once been a symbol of “no tolerance” was now in danger of being swallowed by the base he rode on….
That evening, on a conservative TV show, Jeanine Pirro appeared. She sat in her usual chair, with an American flag and a blurry picture of Trump in the background.
As soon as the host finished asking, “What do you think of the President’s statement?” Pirro jumped right in, no beating around the bush.
“He’s done nothing but say what his base feels,” she said. “They’ve seen Marjorie go in the other direction – going on shows that called his base extreme, using the same language that the hostile press used to talk about him.”

She mentioned polling, mentioned Greene’s criticism of Trump’s policy priorities, mentioned her appearances on “left-friendly” shows. But Pirro wasn’t playing the role of bitter accuser; she was playing the role of political judge.
“Primary is not punishment,” she concluded. “Primary is the movement’s way of cleaning itself up. If she’s still the voice of America First, voters will keep her. If she’s just a ‘great victim’ who complains all the time… they’ll pick someone else, and the President will side with someone else.”
The words spread like wildfire.
In Georgia, local activist groups started calling each other. Names once considered “not to mess with MTG” were suddenly being mentioned: a prominent county commissioner, a young pro-Trump businessman, a military veteran with a voice in the church community. They were asked a single question: “If the President was behind you, would you dare run?”
In this fictional story, Trump is the one who pulled the trigger.