Marjorie Taylor Greene Raises Alarm Over Coordinated Twitter Hate Campaigns Linked to Brad Parscale's Firm
Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Republican congresswoman from Georgia, has accused a network of thousands of coordinated Twitter/X accounts, allegedly run by Brad Parscale’s company Influensible, of targeting her and spreading hate. Parscale, former manager of President Trump’s 2016 and 2020 campaigns, is now a registered foreign agent for Israel, according to U.S. government disclosures filed in September 2025. Greene told reporters that these networks are detrimental to honest political discourse and urged Twitter/X /X CEO Elon Musk to require such accounts to be labeled, citing the current lack of transparency as a significant issue for American voters.
Greene’s Allegations and Concerns
The networks she believes are spreading harassment content and false information about her Twitter/X /X posts remain unidentified under current legal standards. The average voter in her district focuses on essential matters like rent, healthcare, and family needs instead of following Sharia Law conspiracy theories that spread across these platforms. The high number of coordinated attacks on me indicates a professional operation, Greene said during her recent press conference.
Brad Parscale’s Role and Foreign Agent Registration
Brad Parscale became a foreign agent when he registered under FARA on September 18, 2025, to work with Israel. The $6 million digital content production contract of Clock Tower X LLC targets Gen Z users across TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and podcast platforms. The digital content campaign developed by Parscale aims to fight antisemitism while spreading Israeli-friendly messages, yet experts doubt it will use methods to silence American protesters.
The Trump campaign under Parscale used sophisticated data analysis and microtargeting strategies through his partnerships with Cambridge Analytica and other disputed companies. The massive size of his current operation, which plans to reach 50 million social media users monthly, has sparked doubts about how foreign-backed social media campaigns affect American public discourse.
“The contract requires at least 80 percent of the content to target Gen Z, with the explicit goal of shaping public opinion and influencing narratives,” according to Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, which first disclosed the details.
The Impact on Political Discourse
The lack of transparency in social media influence and ethics has become a significant issue, according to Greene. The public can still view Parscale’s foreign agent registration, but there is no federal requirement for influencers to disclose their funding sources. The lack of federal oversight allows networks to distribute messages without revealing their sources, which enables them to conduct political influence operations through secret channels.
Research findings and media investigations demonstrate how coordinated propaganda campaigns generate fake public discourse that peaks during election times. The increasing use of artificial intelligence content distribution through automated systems has raised concerns because experts suspect this method was used to shape Israeli public opinion about Gaza operations.
Calls for Transparency
Privacy advocates and lawmakers alike echo Greene’s call for clear labeling of political influencers. As the U.S. enters the 2026 election cycle, the issue of foreign influence and digital transparency is likely to remain prominent. “The real challenge is ensuring that voters know who is behind the posts they see and what interests are being served,” said one policy analyst at the Quincy Institute.
In summary, Marjorie Taylor Greene’s allegations spotlight the growing role of digital influence networks led by political operatives like Brad Parscale, who are registered as foreign agents and manage large-scale campaigns. The debate over transparency, accountability, and the integrity of domestic discourse is set to intensify as the following election approaches.




Excellent analysis, you realy nail the complexity here. The scale of these coordinated campaigns is wild; it makes me think how easily algorithms can get twisted with a political agenda. It's a real digital maze out there.