The New York Times journalist also predicted what's to come from the anti-immigration hardliner during Donald Trump's second term.
As President-elect Donald Trump is set to be inaugurated as the 47th president in just one day, one of his top policy advisers, Stephen Miller, met with Republican leadership in Congress on Sunday to discuss what executive orders Trump will sign once he takes office.
Two days before Christmas, a group led by President-elect Donald Trump's chief architect of immigration policy wrote to state, county and city officials in so-called “sanctuary” jurisdictions to threaten criminal prosecution,
The answer is, we twice elevated a man as amoral as Donald Trump to absolute power, and he brought with him—and is bringing with him again—men and women as violent, vicious, and wicked as Stephen Miller. It’s hard to think of Miller and his plans for our country without feeling anything but cold, hard pit-of-your-stomach rage and sadness.
President-elect Donald Trump will quickly implement executive actions on immigration, energy policy, and federal government operations to check off dozens of campaign policy priorities.
The incoming deputy chief of staff told lawmakers that early action would include directives to give President-elect Donald J. Trump more control over federal workers, as well as on energy and immigration.
Incoming White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller promised Trump would usher in a “golden age” after four years of Biden, quipping that it has felt more like “400 hundred years.” “Four years of humiliation and embarrassment,
Stephen Miller was the architect of Donald J. Trump’s hard-line immigration agenda in his first term. Now he is back with fewer internal rivals and even more influence with the president.
Less than two months before Mark Zuckerberg announced Meta would be axing its diversity, equity and inclusion program, he assured Trump adviser Stephen Miller that he would not get in the way of the president-elect’s agenda.
Congress could withhold hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal funds from sanctuary jurisdictions like New York City that limit information about non-citizens from being shared with federal
Incoming Homeland Security adviser Stephen Miller discussed deportations and funding to sanctuary cities during a roughly hour-long lunch held by the House Republican Study Committee.
Incoming White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller stopped by Capitol Hill Wednesday to ask for help sketching out President-elect Donald Trump’s signature mass deportation plan. Miller, an alum of Trump’s first administration,