In Rome, Georgia, where the church steeple rises higher than city hall, faith among the Floyd County Republican Women's Group is divided into two kinds: political and personal.
On a day when other voices in the party have been loud, Pam Peters, the chair of the Floyd County Republican Party, and other members of the GOP are quietly volunteering at a food pantry run by a local ministry.
"We have a mission and we're here to do that mission," Peters said.
On Tuesday, while their representative was speaking at the U.S. Capitol, the group was bagging lunches for school children and trying to avoid the partisan, political winds raging in Washington, D.C.
When it comes to the growing feud between Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene , one of President Trump's earliest and most vocal supp

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