By Nathan Layne and Jayla Whitfield-Anderson
LAFAYETTE, Georgia (Reuters) -In a brightly lit, mostly packed meeting hall in LaFayette, Georgia, Jackie Harling leaned into the microphone, her voice calm and firm, “So the elephant in the room: We love President Trump and we love our congresswoman,” she told the Walker County Republicans on Tuesday night, “and there seems to be a little bit of trouble brewing.”
Attendees, sitting at round tables evenly spaced about the room, listened attentively as Harling, the local party chair, addressed what everyone was thinking: the widening rift between Donald Trump and U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. “We don’t have to take a side,” she said, urging unity.
That Harling felt the need to put the feud between Trump and Greene, until recently

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