U.S. congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene apologizes for comparing
COVID-19 masks to Holocaust
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[June 15, 2021]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican U.S.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene publicly apologized on Monday for
her remarks last month comparing COVID-19 mask requirements and
vaccinations to the Nazi Holocaust that killed 6 million Jews.
"I have made a mistake and it's really bothered me for a couple weeks
now," Greene told a news conference. She added that "there's nothing
comparable" to the Holocaust and "I know the words I stated were hurtful
and for that I am very sorry."
The news conference came amid calls from some Democrats to censure
Greene for her Holocaust remarks. Her comments had also been denounced
by Republican congressional leaders.
She said she had visited the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
earlier on Monday. She also mentioned that when she was 19 years old,
she visited the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland where more than 1
million Jews were murdered by the Nazis.
It was not the first time the 47-year-old congresswoman from Georgia,
who arrived in Congress in January, had roiled the waters in Washington.
In February, the Democratic-led House of Representatives stripped her of
two high-profile committee assignments after her remarks that included
support for violence against Democrats. Then, too, Greene distanced
herself from such statements, saying: "These were words of the past and
these things do not represent me."
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Republican U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene publicly
apologized on Monday for her remarks last month comparing COVID-19
mask requirements and vaccinations to the Nazi Holocaust that killed
6 million Jews. Bryan Wood reports.
In response to reporters' questions on Monday,
Greene, an ardent supporter of former President Donald Trump,
refused to distance herself from a comment he made in 2017,
following violent protests involving white supremacists in
Charlottesville, Virginia, in which he said there "were very fine
people on both sides."
Before arriving in Congress, Greene voiced support for unfounded
conspiracy theories, including the QAnon claim that elite Democrats
are part of a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles and cannibals,
as well as an anti-Semitic claim suggesting a space laser was used
to deliberately start a California wildfire.
Greene opened her news conference saying: "I just always want to
remind everyone I'm very much a normal person."
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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