House Removes Greene from Committees
Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP, Pool
We ran the numbers: There are 1849 news articles covering this topic. 70% (1294) are left leaning, 24% (445) are center, and 6% (110) are right leaning.
On Thursday, a divided House removed Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene off both of her committees. While left-leaning articles highlight that the House was fiercely divided, as the chamber’s near party-line vote was 230-199, right-leaning articles highlight that House Republicans voted to keep Representative Liz Cheney as their No. 3 leader.
The Washington Post published a left-leaning article highlighting that the House was fiercely divided, as the chamber’s near party-line vote was 230-199. The political imperative for Democrats were clear, as Greene’s support for violence was dangerous and merited punishment.
The Hill published a centrist article reporting that Representative Adam Kinzinger said it was disappointing to see Republican colleagues give Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene a standing ovation after she apologized for her past controversial remarks. Greene has faced backlash for her remarks promoting QAnon conspiracy theory and reports that school shootings were staged to win support for gun control.
A right-leaning article by New York Post highlights that House Republicans voted to keep Representative Liz Cheney as their No. 3 leader. Cheney was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump last month.