The report / written article has several sections with different versions.Β But it seems clear that Gestapo leader Stephen Miller is pushing everyone to send the message to ICE thugs and all right wing news media that the government would shield ICE gang thugs as long as they kept the harassment and terrorizing the brown people.Β The goal of ICE is to make brown people too scared for their lives to stay in the country or come here.Β The goal of the government is to force the public into instant obedience and to never protest anything the tRump people do or demand no matter how illegal, abusive, or scamming.Β Β Hugs
A third officer, positioned in front of her car on the left, drew his gun and fired three times while jumping back, with the last shots aimed through the driver’s window after the car’s bumper appeared to have cleared his body.
The video did not appear to show contact and the officer stayed on his feet, though Ms Noem said he was taken to a hospital and released.
US Vice-President JD Vance says an ICE officer was clearly justified in shooting a woman during an immigration enforcement surge.
Minnesota authorities have accused the FBI of seeking to block their access to an investigation into the death of Renee Nicole Good, 37.Β
What’s next?
Protesters have taken to the streets and some local schools have cancelled classes for the day.
US Vice-President JD Vance has defended the immigration agent who shot and killed a 37-year-old Minneapolis woman amid tensions between state and federal officials.
Renee Nicole Good was shot in the head in front of a family member on Wednesday, local time, during an immigration enforcement surge.
Mr Vance said the shooting was justified and that Ms Good was a “victim of left-wing ideology”.
“I can believe that her death is a tragedy while also recognising that it is a tragedy of her own making,” he said.
Mr Vance said the officer was clearly acting in self-defence.
There has been an outpouring of grief and anger in the community following the shooting.Β (AP: Mike Householder)
FBI ‘reversed course’ over joint probe
Minnesota’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) said it had been blocked by the FBI from taking part in a joint investigation into the shooting.
Following the shooting, the BCA initially said it had agreed to jointly investigate the shooting with the FBI.
But on Thursday, a day after the shooting, BCA Superintendent Drew Evans said the federal agency had “reversed course” and taken sole control over the probe.
He said that step meant the state bureau would no longer have access to the scene evidence, case materials or interviews.
“As a result, the BCA has reluctantly withdrawn from the investigation,” Superintendent Evans said.
The FBI and the office of US Attorney Daniel Rosen, the chief federal prosecutor in Minneapolis, did not immediately respond to questions about the BCA statement.
Keith Ellison, the state’s Democratic attorney general, told CNN the FBI’s decision was “deeply disturbing” and said state authorities could investigate with or without the cooperation of the federal government.
Renee Nicole Good was shot inside her car on Wednesday, local time.Β (Reuters: Tim Evans)
Ms Good’s death has left Minneapolis on edge, with protesters taking to the streets in anger and schools cancelling classes as a precaution on Thursday.
Minnesota and Trump administration officials have offered starkly different accounts of the shooting, with US President Donald Trump describing the slain woman as a “professional agitator”.
Democratic politicians and protesters have contested that claim, with the Minneapolis City Council saying she was “out caring for her neighbours” and died “at the hands of the federal government”.
Vance says officer deserves gratitude
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on Wednesday, local time, that the officer who shot Ms Good had been “dragged” by a vehicle during a previous incident in June.
According to court documents, the officer was part of a team trying to apprehend a man in the country illegally.
JD Vance defended the shooting as self-defence during a press conference on Thursday.Β (Reuters: Kevin Lamarque)
He broke a window and reached into the vehicle, attempting to open the door when the driver sped off, dragging the officer the length of a football field in 12 seconds.
The officer’s right arm was bleeding, and an FBI agent applied a tourniquet.
He was transported to a hospital, where he received more than 50 stitches.
Prosecutors said he had “suffered multiple large cuts and abrasions to his knee, elbow, and face”.
Mr Vance said the ICE officer “deserves a debt of gratitude”.
“This is a guy who’s actually done a very, very important job for the United States of America,” he said.
“He’s been assaulted. He’s been attacked. He’s been injured because of it.”
City and state officials blame immigration surge for shooting
Federal authorities in Minneapolis used chemical agents on protesters during democrations on Thursday, a day after the shooting.Β (AP: Tom Baker)
The agent was among 2,000 federal officers that the Trump administration had announced it was deploying to the Minneapolis area in what the Department of Homeland Security described as the “largest DHS operation ever”.
But Wednesday’s shooting drew immediate condemnation from city and state officials who blamed Mr Trump’s immigration enforcement surge for sowing chaos in the city’s streets.
DHS officials, including Ms Noem, defended the shooting as self-defence and accused the woman of trying to ram agents in an act of “domestic terrorism”.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, called that assertion “bulls**t” and “garbage” based onΒ bystander videos taken of the incidentΒ that appeared to contradict the government’s account.
Videos showed two masked officers approaching Ms Good’s car, which was stopped at a perpendicular angle on a Minneapolis street.
As one officer ordered Ms Good out of the car and grabbed at her door handle, the car briefly reversed and then began driving forward, turning to the right in an apparent attempt to leave the scene.
A third officer, positioned in front of her car on the left, drew his gun and fired three times while jumping back, with the last shots aimed through the driver’s window after the car’s bumper appeared to have cleared his body.
The video did not appear to show contact and the officer stayed on his feet, though Ms Noem said he was taken to a hospital and released.
Illustration by Ben Kothe / The Atlantic. Sources: Demetrius Freeman / The Washington Post / Getty; Kayla Bartkowski / Getty; Samuel Corum / Sipa / Bloomberg / Getty.
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January 7, 2026
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Stephen MillerΒ runs his daily 10 a.m. conference callsβyes, even on Saturdaysβless like a government adviser and more like a wartime general. His is the dominant voice, as he plays the role of browbeater, inquisitor, and bully. He accepts no excuses, entertains no dissent.
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Donald Trumpβs deputy chief of staff for policy ruthlessly pursues the presidentβs vision, especially when it comes to pushing immigrants out of the country, and he runs a tight, efficient meeting. Consensus is not the goal.
Instead, Miller demands progress reports on his mass-deportation campaign and issues orders to the full alphabet soup of federal enforcement agencies, including the FBI, CBP, ICE, HHS, and the DOD. One senior official who has participated in the calls told us that the intensity and urgency often veer into hectoring. βHe pushes everybody to the absolute limit because he knows that the clock is ticking,β this person said. βHe gets on the phone and he yells at everybody. Nobody is spared from his wrath.β
In May, Miller told Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials that he wanted 3,000 immigration arrests a day, a nearly tenfold increase over the number theyβd arrested on U.S. streets in 2024. He demands daily updates on the ICEΒ hiring surgeΒ too; the administration had pledged to deploy 10,000 new deportation officers by this monthβmore than doubling the agencyβs workforce. And Miller expects regular updates on detention capacity,Β deportation flights, and border crossings.
Miller publicly shames bureaucrats he feels are falling short or resisting orders. βIf thereβs a problem and youβre the owner, you have to fix it quickly,β another frequent conference-call participant told us. βItβs not a place where you can say, βI have to get back to you.ββ
A third official told us that the calls are unlike any other government meetings theyβve attended. βIf you say something stupid, heβll tell you to your face. You are expected to perform at a certain level, and thereβs no excuse for not meeting those expectations,β this person said.
In Trumpβs inner circleβeven with the president himselfβMiller is known as a dogmatic force whose ideas are sometimes too extreme for public consumption. βIβd love to have him come up and explain his true feelingsβmaybe not hisΒ truestΒ feelings,β the president joked at an Oval Office briefing in October. But in Trumpβs second term, Miller finds himself at the height of his powersβthe pulsing human id of a president who is already almost pure id.
Miller has tried to recast the nationβs partisan political disagreements as an existential conflict, a battle pitting βforces of wickedness and evilβ against the nationβs noble, virtuous peopleβa mostly native-born crowd that traces its lineage and legacy βback to Athens, to Rome, to Philadelphia, to Monticello.β He accuses federal judges of βlegal insurrectionβ for ruling against Trumpβs policies, describes the Democratic Party as a βdomestic extremist organization,β and dismisses the results of even legal immigration programs as βthe Somalification of America.β And he has declared an end to the postβWorld War II order of βinternational nicetiesβ in favor of a world that rebukes the weak, βthat is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power,β as he put it this week when discussing recent military action against Venezuela.
Along with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Miller was the chief force behind Trumpβs decision to capture the Venezuelan strongman NicolΓ‘s Maduro. βWe are a superpower, and under President Trump, we are going to conduct ourselves as a superpower,β Miller told CNNβs Jake Tapper on Monday, articulating a worldview that started with the fear of immigration but has gradually expanded to a broader national-security and rule-of-law argument. (In this Darwinian vein, Miller also declared that the U.S. military could seize Greenland without a fight, echoing a social-media post that his wife, Katie Miller, had made two days earlier, showing an American flag superimposed on a map of the icy landmass alongside the word: SOON. NATO leaders have nervously affirmed Denmarkβs claim to the territory.)
Millerβs official titlesβhe is also the director of the interagency Homeland Security Councilβunderstate the full sweep of his purview. Steve Bannon, a former Trump adviser and a Miller ally, describes him as Trumpβs βprime minister.β Miller has a role in nearly every area about which he cares deeply: immigration and border security, yes, but also national security, foreign policy, trade, military action, and policing. He may draft a flurry of executive orders one day, lead a meeting on lowering domestic beef prices the next, and travel to deliver a fiery speech of his ownβthink Trump at his angriest and most dystopian, without any of the presidentβs impish humorβthe following week. (Miller declined to comment for this story.)
Early in Trumpβs second term, he invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to treat migrants as part of aΒ foreign invasion, directed Congress to passΒ $150 billionΒ in new funding for homeland-security enforcement, and captained the administrationβs assault on elite universities such as Harvard and Columbia. Late last year, he helped orchestrate Trumpβs authorization ofΒ military strikesΒ on suspected drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, setting the stage for the military operation against Maduro.
The force behind Millerβs directives became clear duringΒ Signalgateβin which the Trump administration accidentally includedΒ The AtlanticβsΒ editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, on a private Signal chat about aΒ bombing campaignΒ in Yemen. It was Millerβnot Trumpβs national security adviser, Pentagon chief, or even vice presidentβwho ended the debate and directed the group to move forward with the strikes. Trump has described Miller as sitting βat the top of the totem poleβ inside the White House.
βHe oversees every policy the administration touches,β White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told us. βI canβt tell you the number of times a policy matter is discussed in the Oval and Trump will say, βWhereβs Stephen? Tell him to get that done.ββ
To critics, Miller is the smirking embodiment of everything they view as dangerous and authoritarian about the Trump administration. He has been called a Nazi, a neo-Nazi, a white supremacist, a kapo, and Lord Voldemort. Posters of Millerβpursed lips, furrowed browβhave been plastered around the nationβs capital, stamped withΒ CREEPΒ andΒ FASCISM AINβT PRETTY. His own uncle has denounced him, writing at one point that if Millerβs immigration policies had been implemented a century ago, their familyβwhich fled anti-Jewish pogroms in Europeββwould have been wiped out.β
Yet if Miller has internalized any of the criticism, or acknowledged the parallels to his own lineage, he has not shown it, even among friends or colleagues. Miller is now acting as an accelerant for the presidentβs most incendiary impulses and shaping the lives of individual Americans in nearly every realm. He has demonstrated neither the interest nor the ability to moderate his viewsβeven for tactical purposes. He is apt to overreach. And he has shown that heβs not afraid to use the power of the government to go after those who try to stand in his wayβeven his liberal neighbors, whom he has accused of threatening his family.
During Trumpβs first term, Miller pushed theΒ family-separation policyΒ at the southern border, a measure long considered too extreme to implement. It triggered such a massive backlash that Trumpβs wife and eldest daughter urged him to stop it. The separations became the defining immigration policy of Trumpβs first term, undermining his ability to run on the issue in 2020. Now that heβs back in office, the latest polling shows eroding support for the presidentβs immigration crackdown, especially among theΒ Latino votersΒ who helped carry him to victory in 2024.
But Miller has continued to push not just for the deportation of people in the country illegally but also for narrowing or closing legal immigration pathways, especially for people from poor, not-majority-white, non-Christian nations. His actions have struck many Americans as racist and xenophobic. (In 2019, for instance,Β the Southern Poverty Law Center reportedΒ on leaked emails in which Miller urged the conservativeΒ Breitbart NewsΒ to promote ideas fromΒ The Camp of the Saints, aΒ 1973 French novelΒ popular in white-nationalist and neo-Nazi circles.) Colleagues who have worked with him for years say they have never heard him utter a racist slur, even in private. His devotion is not to white supremacy per se, they insist, but to the political and intellectual thesis he has been pushing since before he arrived in Washington. He wants to halt and reverse Americaβs post-1960s immigration boom, and he pursues that goal with a fervor that has made him the public face of Trumpβs restrictionist immigration policies.
During debate prep for the 2024 campaign, Miller found himself in a contentious back-and-forth over immigration with a more moderate Trump ally. Finally, a frustrated Trump interrupted the two men:Β Stephen,Β he said,Β if you had it your way, everyone would look exactly like you, someone familiar with the exchange told us.
βThatβs correct,β Miller said, before turning back to continue sparring.
The nexusΒ of Millerβs power is a vestige of President George W. Bushβs War on Terror. Weeks after the attacks of September 11, 2001, Bush established the Homeland Security Council to coordinate the governmentβs domestic response to the new threats from abroad. More than two and a half decades later, Miller has attached that rubric of national emergency to a new target, turning the council into a daily war room to track and fine-tune Trumpβs campaign toΒ deport 1 million peopleΒ a year.
The September murder of the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, who wasΒ close to manyΒ in the administration, including Miller, plunged Trumpβs already single-minded martinet into a maximalist frenzy. A portrait of Ronald Reagan hangs prominently in the Oval Officeβjust over Trumpβs left shoulder when heβs seated at the Resolute Deskβbut Miller has made it abundantly clear that this is no longer Reaganβs Republican Party.
Former Senator Jeff Flake, the Arizona Republican who retired during Trumpβs first term, told us that he has noticed a clear shift from one Trump administration to the next. βBefore, it was more subtle, more nuanced, but now itβs pretty plain. He wants to see more immigration from the Nordic countries, and not so much from the Third World countries. Itβs just a clear break from the huddled masses yearning to breathe free,β said Flake, who, as a senator, worked unsuccessfully to pass a bipartisan immigration overhaul. βItβs not the Reagan vision. Itβs not the traditional Republican vision.β
Flake said that although the immigration system has serious problems, Trump and Millerβs goal seems to be βto change the nature of who we are as a country.β
Beyond immigration, Miller specializes in turning the presidentβs whims and rantings into government policy. As Trump griped about the homeless encampments near the State Department one day, Leavitt recalled that he turned to Miller and said: βGet it done.β βAnd within six hours,β she said, βI looked at Twitter, and there were cranes cleaning them up.β
βStephen is the most effective political aide of this generationβand probably since James Baker,β the former Trump adviser Cliff Sims told us in a text. βNo one is more deft at moving the levers of government to turn the Presidentβs policies into action.β
May Mailman, who last year worked closely with Miller toΒ punish elite universitiesΒ that the administration claims are rife with anti-Semitism and βwokeβ ideology, explained to us how Miller approaches a problem. In March, for instance, upset withΒ Columbia UniversityΒ for several reasonsβincluding prominent pro-Palestinian protests on campusβTrump posted a message on social media that began, βAll Federal Funding will STOP for any College, School, or University that allows illegal protests.β Miller told Mailman to come up with some options, but, with Trumpβs buy-in, Miller was ultimately the one who approved pulling federal funding from the school.
Then he carefully watched for the reaction. βIf taking money from Columbia was a bad idea and backfired in some way, then Stephen would be the one to demand a course correction,β said Mailman, who first worked with Miller during Trumpβs first term. βBut because that worked out pretty well, he then tries to figure out: How can we use that tool in other areas?β
Close observers of Miller say that his total command is a marked contrast to his role during the first Trump term, when, despite being a senior adviser, he was limited in his ability to direct others. David Lapan, a retired Marine Corps colonel and aide to former Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, told us that he remembers attending a 2017 meeting at which Miller urged officials to send him examples of crimes committed by immigrants so he could publicize them. The difference then, Lapan said, is that Miller had an advisory role, and the other meeting attendees could disregard requests that they felt were too outlandish. βWe came out of that meeting and said,Β Yeah, weβre not doing that,β Lapan recalled. βWe knew that Kelly would cover for us.β
βAre there stories like that out there? Sure,β Lapan said. βBut theyβre the exception, not the rule. Cherry-picking a few bad cases to paint all immigrants in a negative light is not something that we were willing to do.β
Although Miller views himself as the presidentβs loyal servant, Trumpβs stances appear to have shifted under Millerβs direction. The president used to speak favorably about certain immigrant groups he liked, such asΒ DACA recipientsΒ and the employees at his golf resorts. But lately, his occasional pro-immigrant chatter has quieted. ββAmerica Firstβ is becoming βAmericans Only,ββ Lapan said.
Illustration by Ben Kothe. Sources: Getty; Jim Watson / AFP / Getty.
Miller turned 40Β in August and celebrated with a surprise party at the Ned, a chic members-only club blocks from the White House. The president did not show up, but just about everyone else did: White House Chief of StaffΒ Susie Wiles, House Speaker Mike Johnson, conservative influencers, nearly every Cabinet secretary. Miller did not have a speech prepared but spoke self-deprecatingly, thanking Wiles for putting up with his ideas and suggestions. The turnout was a show of not just Millerβs immense power but also his popularity in an administration that has been rife with infighting and backstabbing, especially during Trumpβs first term.
The gleeful brawler Miller plays on TV is no act, his colleagues told us, and he behaves similarly in private (although often with a dash of deadpan humor). Several people told us that they appreciate how dogmatic he is, for a possibly surprising reason: They always know where he stands on the issues, and where they stand with him. As Trumpβs speechwriter during the first administration, he built goodwill with colleagues by warning them when the president was about to say something contrary to their plans, so they had time to try to convince him otherwise.
βThe lazy and clearly false hit on him is to call him these disgusting names,β White House Communications Director Steven Cheung told us, about the accusations that Miller is a Nazi or a fascist. βIf you dig deeper and arenβt suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome, heβs not what the media portrays him as. Heβs actually a very nice and cordial person who cares about this country and wants to do a good job. Heβs very easy to work with. Iβve been in Trump world a long time, and heβs probably the easiest to work with.β
Several people described Miller as an exacting boss, even a micromanager, but one who looks out for his teamβincluding younger aides. In Trumpβs first term, he was not yet married, and he spent many of his nights out, grabbing drinks or dinner with everyone from Cabinet secretaries to more junior staff, who were eager to get time with him. When Trumpβs first term wound down, Miller helped ensure that everyone on his staff (and even some not on his team) had a job lined up.
Friends and colleagues say he has rarely seemed hurt by the criticism and caricatures. But he can be vain about his appearance; in Trumpβs first term, he once showed up toΒ Face the NationΒ with what was roundly mocked as spray-on hair. (In Trumpβs second term, the hair is gone.) And after a recentΒ Vanity FairΒ photo shootΒ of senior West Wing staff, the photographerβwhose close-up, often unflattering photos went viralβrecounted toΒ The Washington PostΒ that Miller βwas perhaps the most concerned about the portrait session,β asking whether or not he should smile. Colleagues also describe a proud sartorialist who regularly debated fashion and traded menswear tips with another West Wing fashionista, Hogan Gidley, a deputy press secretary during Trumpβs first term.
βWe would talk about the difference in fabrics for seasons, and lapel size and width of ties and these types of things,β Gidley told us, before describing Millerβs style as βsophisticated and smart and chic but also daring at times.β
In a recentlyΒ resurfaced 2003 video, a 17-year-old Millerβprominent sideburns and tightly coiled brown hairβsits in the back of a moving school bus, opining on the war in Iraq. In the video, Miller smirkily suggests that the βideal solutionβ for βSaddam Hussein and his henchmenβ would be βto cut off their fingersβ; he argues that torture is the proper punishment in a nonbarbaric society. (In a barbaric society, he implies, death would be the appropriate punishment.) βTorture is a celebration of life and human dignity,β he continues, briefly unable to hide his delight as his latest outlandish proclamation illicits titters from his peersβhis mouth widens into a toothy grin, and he emits an audible chuckle before taking a breath and continuing.
This isΒ Miller the troll, who has confided in friends that he enjoys starting a fire, then dousing it with gasoline. But after more than two decades relishing his role as the gleeful contrarian, the persona has now become more true character than occasional outlandish caricature. βHe has a flair for the dramatic, and you can tell that now with the way he comports himself on TV,β Bannon told us. βHe plays the character well, knowing he always wants to have the libsββthe progressivesββheads blow up.β
After graduating from Duke in 2007βwhere heΒ vigorously defendedΒ white lacrosse players who were falsely accused of rape by a Black stripperβMiller landed a job with newly elected Republican Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota. As young Capitol Hill aides, he and Sergio Gorβwho recently became Trumpβs ambassador to Indiaβhelped launch the supernova ambitions of Bachmann, a right-wing darling whose then-fringe ideology presaged the rise of MAGA. By the time Bachmannβs 2012 presidential bid flamed out, Miller was already firmly ensconced with then-Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama, who shared his hard-line obsession with immigration, and Bannon, who provided a broader nationalist, populist scaffolding.
As Sessionsβs aide-de-camp, Miller helped his boss sabotage the bipartisan βGang of Eightβ immigration bill, which passed the Senate by a wide margin in 2013. At the time, a post-2012 Republican autopsy was calling for a gentler, more inclusive GOP, and the proposed immigration overhaul had the support of business and tech leaders, interest groups, and wealthy donors. But Miller was undaunted, buttonholing reporters in the hallways of Congress to press his anti-immigrant case, and calling them later at home to talkβfor hours, if theyβd let himβabout the billβs minutiae and why it would harm American workers. The bill died in the House, where it never came up for a vote.
Miller pushed colleagues to keep the same round-the-clock hours as he did, including calling meetings on Friday afternoons, when most Hill staffers were eager to skip out early to happy hours. Instead, Republican staffers sullenly reported to messaging meetings to talk about immigration.
Working with Bannon, Miller madeΒ Breitbart NewsΒ the communications arm of his effort. And, understanding that data and statistics, however dubious, could lend their cause the sheen of legitimacy, they elevated obscure anti-immigration groupsβthe Center for Immigration Studies, NumbersUSAβinto prominent sources. βThe more outrageous the headline, the better,β Bannon said.
By the time Miller joined Trumpβs 2016 campaignβofficially launchedΒ with claims that Mexico was sending βrapistsβ and criminals across the borderβhis immigration bona fides were well established, and he learned to channel Trumpβs voice into policy prescriptions. The baby-faced Miller quickly moved from the back of Trumpβs plane to the inner circle at the front.
By March 2016, Miller was Trumpβs opening act, riling up crowds across the country with an anti-immigrant, anti-Washington populism that sometimes threatened to overshadow Trump himself. βI said, βListen, the point of an introduction is that Trump doesnβt have to top it,ββ Bannon said. βHe was so insane over-the-top. But of course the MAGA base canβt get enough of him.β
In Trumpβs first White House, Miller made quick use of the various levers available to him, no matter how buried in the bureaucratic bowels. He took a particular interest in the office of the staff secretary, a little-known but powerful team that vets any memo or speech or policy before it reaches the president. Not a lawyer himself, he nevertheless leaned on creative and expansive interpretations of statutes to push the presidentβs agenda. In the early days of COVID, for instance, he successfully urged the administration to invoke a 1944 emergency public-health law toΒ shut down the borderΒ and rapidly expel migrants to Mexico or their home country. In a White House staffed partly by amateurs, he also benefited from his deep understanding of policy issues, which heβd been honing since high school. He coached Trump and others into even more extreme immigration positions, explaining why, for instance, he believed that giving merit-based green cards to promising foreign students was problematic.
Even his allies find Miller to be something of an βacquired taste,β as one put it. Another quipped that he has the bedside manner ofΒ Heinrich Himmler, one of Adolf Hitlerβs earliest followers and a key architect of the Holocaust. But Mailman said that Miller could be strategic when making a policy pitch. On immigration, he instinctively understood if someone was a βtype personβ (who cared about theΒ typeΒ of immigrant coming to the country) or a βnumbers personβ (who cared simply about the sheerΒ numberΒ of immigrants) and often tailored his message accordingly. βHe thinks about the rationale of how someone is approaching something,β she said.
Because Millerβs viewsβespecially on immigrationβwere so well known, he earned Trumpβs trust despite also, at times, vigorously disagreeing with him. βMiller is 100 percent firm in every conviction and feeling he has, and he just says it the way he believes it, and if it aligns with what the president wants to do, then great,β a first-term Trump aide told us. βAnd if itβs nuanced or different, then Miller stakes out his positionβhe doesnβt care if itβs different from what other people think or what the president wantsβbut then once the president makes his position clear, Miller executes on it, whether or not he agrees with it.β
During the first term, Miller aligned himself with Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, once it became clear that they held tremendous sway with the president. The pairing was unusual, given that the presidentβs daughter and son-in-law were seen as misguided βglobalistsβ by much of the far-right base. One person familiar with the dynamic described Miller spending hours with Ivanka Trump on her key initiativesβpaid family leave and tax credits for parents. The charitable explanation, this person continued, is that Miller was being generous with his time and expertise; the more cynical one is that Miller understood thatΒ Ivanka TrumpΒ was less likely to complain to her father about Millerβs hard-line immigration policies if the two had a good relationship.
βHe always understood where power lies,β Bannon said. βNo matter whatβhe can be coaching a Little League teamβMiller can very quickly analyze.β
Millerβs fealty to his boss was on display right up until the end of Trumpβs first term. OnΒ January 6, 2021, Millerβs wifeβwho had worked as Vice President Mike Penceβs communications directorβwas on maternity leave but still employed by Pence. But when Trump called Miller that morning to discuss adding lines to his speech attacking Pence, Millerβever the good soldierβdid as he was told.
Later that day, angry Trump supporters marched to the Capitol, calling for the vice president to be hanged for treason.
The enemyΒ arrived at the Millersβ doorstep on a warm September morning in the form of a retired gender and peace-studies professor in a loose striped dress. Barbara Wien, who had been protesting the familyβs presence in Arlington, Virginia, pointed her index and middle fingers at her own eyes, then directed those fingers at Katie Miller, who was on the front porch.
Stephen Miller took the gesture at his wife, which was captured on video, as a call to violenceβan offense that he uniquely had the power to punish.
The Millers had already felt under siege, facing threats and fearing that the entire family was being surveilled by sophisticated actors. A Rhode Island man had been indicted in August for publicly threatening to kill Miller and other officials. A law-enforcement official told us that Katie Miller had been surreptitiously photographed in her neighborhoodβwhile going to the gym, and at least once while walking with her kidsβand said that there was a βcoordinatedβ and βmaliciousβ effort to, at the very least, intimidate them. Someone had also posted flyers at neighborhood parks where their kids played, revealing their home address and calling him a Nazi. The Millers had stopped allowing their children to play in front of the house or in the backyard.
But they were not going to be intimidated by a 66-year-old activist.
βYou want us to live in fear? We will not live in fear,β Miller said days later, in an appearance on Sean Hannityβs Fox News program. He had gone on the program to discuss the federal response to Kirkβs recent assassination, but although he was focused on βdomestic terrorists,β he included doxxing on the list of related offenses. For those familiar with the Millersβ personal lives, it sounded less like he was talking about Kirkβs assassin than about Wien, whoβd distributed flyers with his address.
βYou will live in exile,β he continued, βbecause the power of law enforcement under President Trumpβs leadership will be used to find you, will be used to take away your money, take away your power, and, if you have broken the law, to take away your freedom.β
Miller set about drafting a series of executive orders, later signed by Trump, that directed federal law enforcement to refocus counterterrorism efforts on people with βanti-fascistβ ideas, such as βextremism on migration, race, and genderβ and βhostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.β
This fall, Miller also began describing a central divide in the country, pitting βlegitimate state powerβ against what he termed left-wing βstreet violence.β His definition of the latter was broad. He accused Democratic politicians who called him or Trump βauthoritarianβ of βinciting violence.β (Never mind that he had repeatedly called the Biden administration βfascist.β) He placed doxxingβwhat his family facedβon the continuum that leads to violence. (Also never mind thatΒ Vice President J. D. VanceΒ encouraged calling out those who celebrated Kirkβs murder, including at their place of employment.)
As Miller announced federal policies aimed at combatting the threat, he was also fighting a private battle against the very enemy he described. In the weeks after Wien made her gesture in front of his wife, the Millers decided that they were no longer safe in their six-bedroom, roughly $3 million Northern Virginia home. TheyΒ sought out military housingΒ at a nearby base, arguing to friends and allies inside the administration that their safety depended on it.
But the legitimate powers of the state repeatedly declined to fully cooperate with the Millersβ attempt to turn their own situation into a catalyst for the sort of crackdown they claimed was necessary. The FBI was initially hesitant to take a major role in the investigation of Wien, prompting the Millers to demand its involvement, according to a person briefed on their efforts. A Democratic Virginia state prosecutor became concerned about the federal involvement in a search warrant on Wien, and sought to narrow its scope. A federal magistrate judge refused to approve federal search warrants, according to a report byΒ Axios.
Katie Miller, who hosts her own podcast, recently appeared on Piers Morganβs YouTube show and accused a progressive guest, Cenk Uyger, of attacking her Jewish children by merely having a difference of opinion with her. She then offered a veiled threat to have Uygerβs citizenship revoked. (Uyger is a naturalized citizen; in a text message, he described Katie Millerβs threat as βnot an attack on me as much as itβs an attack on America.β) When the investigation against Wien appeared to stall, Millerβs longtime ally Jim Jordan, the House Judiciary Committee chair, announced that he had opened an inquiry into the Democratic prosecutor in Virginia who had sought to narrow the search warrant and raised concerns about federal involvement.
βThis is so cool,β Katie Miller said on social media. βThank you.β
Days later, the prosecutor said that she would not cooperate with Jordanβs inquiry, because the investigation was ongoing and Congress lacked the ability to intervene in a state law-enforcement matter. There were still some powers of the state that Miller did not control.
I wish to thank Ten Bears for the link to this article.Β Β We are in a really bad time in this country driven my a dementia addled president that is driven by greed and an unhinged Nazi wannabe man who felt powerless over anyone most of his life Stephen Miller.Β He has felt less than the women and men around him.Β Β Miller has hated brown people since he was a teen and his goal is a white ethnostate.Β Β Hugs
The murder of Renee Good was an intentional act in several senses.
First, it was a murder in the classic legal sense, in that the ICE agent who shot and killed her was in no danger β theΒ video clearly showsΒ Good trying to drive away as masked armed men shout contradictory orders at her β so the use of deadly force had no justification. Of course the entire right wing is lying about this, recalling a famous quote from 1984:
The Party told you to ignore the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
Closely related to this is the fascist fellow traveler move of invoking some utterly phony Rashomon metaphor about βmultiple perspectivesβ or some such dime store postmodernist bullshit. There are multiple perspectives here, but only because half the country is fascist or enablers and tolerators of the fascist movement that is Trumpism. The perspectives are the truth β Renee Good was murdered by ICE β and a lie: The fascist scum who murdered her was acting in self-defense.
But this was an intentional act in a more abstract and attenuated sense, in that Stephen Miller has created a set of circumstances in which it was inevitable that this sort of murder would happen in this way, so he could pursue his sadistic fantasies of a violent crackdown on protest against the regime (note here that Good wasnβt even protesting; she may have been observing ICEβs activities for evidentiary purposes, but even that is unclear). The local Democratic authorities are asking for calm, so that a proper investigation of the murder can take place, but of course there can be no proper investigation when any such investigation needs to take place in the shadow of a fascist federal government, that quite consciously put into place the policies and practices that would make such a murder, as well as future such murders, inevitable.
Meanwhile Donald Trump, whose brain is turning to mush in real time, isΒ apparently seriousΒ about invading Greenland, while Denmark isΒ promising to resistΒ such an invasion with whatever military resources it can muster. All of this is total madness. all of this presages the descent of the nation into pure authoritarianism, and all of this is something that the leadership of the Democratic party is utterly unable to even begin to deal with, as illustrated by these remarks from senior Democratic senators about Marco Rubio and his role in the quarter-baked letβs not even bother to pretend thereβs any legal defense for this coup in Venezuela:
βAlthough I may disagree with him on a day-to-day or hour-to-hour basis β¦ he has shown extraordinary competence,β Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democratic leader, said in an interview. βI voted for him in this position; I still have confidence in his abilities.β
Others said they respected his particular expertise on issues in Latin America while also raising doubts about the strategy for Venezuela he is laying out in public and in private briefings β which for now involves propping up interim president Delcy Rodriguez as a de facto U.S. puppet.
βYou can talk to Marco about β βTell us about Delcy.β β¦ He knows all of that, and he can give you a sense of who they are and what theyβre up to,β said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a former colleague on the Foreign Relations Committee.
Kaine complimented Rubio for putting a renewed focus on the Americas, while quickly adding that Trumpβs self-proclaimed βDonroe doctrineβ is the βwrong kind of attention.β
Compare this attitude toward the Trump administration to Alexandria Ocasio Cortezβs straightforward response to the federal governmentβs murder of Renee Good:
Ultimately, there are βmultiple perspectivesβ on things like the murder of Renee Good and the invasion of Venezuela because half the country is fascist, or fascist-enabling. The essence of Trumpism β in all but textbook fascist movement at this point β is to both deny Renee Good was murdered and at the same time enthusiastically approve of her murder (see Holocaust denial for the classic template).
Half the country are enemies of liberal democracy, and they have to be crushed by its defenders. That the political opposition is not currently capable of this even if it should manage to win actual future elections is too obvious for words.
βNever believe that anti-Semites are completely unaware of the absurdity of their replies. They know that their remarks are frivolous, open to challenge. But they are amusing themselves, for it is their adversary who is obliged to use words responsibly, since he believes in words. The anti-Semites have the right to play. They even like to play with discourse for, by giving ridiculous reasons, they discredit the seriousness of their interlocutors. They delight in acting in bad faith, since they seek not to persuade by sound argument but to intimidate and disconcert. If you press them too closely, they will abruptly fall silent, loftily indicating by some phrase that the time for argument is past.β
I would like to thank https://personnelente.wordpress.com/2026/01/08/causing-problems-on-purpose/ for the link to the story.Β I am listening to congressional republicans drown on about the US being the apex predator so our country has the right to do what ever we wish to on the world stage.Β Our country has the right to take what we want because Nazi Stephen Miller who seems to be running the country because that might makes right and the US has the military might.Β Every time I listen to Miller punch his words out like a poor imitation of Hitler and his entire mocking of anyone in the media or that disagrees with his stance I get a sick horrible feeling in my core being.Β He is unhinged and the most powerful person next to tRump.Β Β Hugs
Protesters clash with law enforcement outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility on January 8, 2026. (Photo by Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images)
More than 2,000 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents are on the ground in Minnesota in what President Donald Trumpβs administrationΒ officials have calledΒ the βlargest immigration operation ever.β Deployed just days ago by Trump, one agent has alreadyΒ shot and killed a personΒ and federal law enforcement has deployed tear gas and pepper spray against protesters.
The massive operation and subsequent violence in Minneapolis comes against the backdrop of TrumpβsΒ announcement Tuesday that heβs freezing $10 billion in federal fundsΒ approved by Congress for child welfare programs, including Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, foster care, and childcare subsidies in Minnesota and four other blue states.Β
This sharp escalation in action has its roots in a yearslong law enforcement investigation into widespread fraud and misuse of federal funds in Minnesota that in late 2025 was seized upon by the right-wing misinformation machine and, this week, reached a screeching fever pitch. Minnesota Governor Tim WalzΒ announcedΒ Monday he would not be running for reelection, in part so he could devote his time to addressing the crisis.Β
The journey from legitimate local and federal investigations into fraud to the so-called largest ICE operation in history, theΒ pausing of federal fundsΒ to blue states and the end of Walzβs gubernatorial tenure is a long and tangled one. As has become common in the Trump era, a serious situation was dispersed throughout the unserious realm of right-wing media and content creation, catching the attention of the president and yielding very real consequences.Β
Hereβs the backstory you need to understand these events.
How the Scandals Started
Amid the right-wing uproar, there are elements of truth: Minnesota has grappled with Medicaid fraud forΒ more than a decade, which has been the focus of federal and state investigations and local news reporting. The schemes were further fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic, during which an influx of federal funding for social programs came with relaxed vetting standards in an effort to allow speedy access for vulnerable populations.Β
Republican furor over widespread fraud has also flared up periodically over the years. But it reached new heights in recent months after a wave of new claims β ranging from the well-founded to the baseless to the entirely histrionic βΒ caught the attention of the president.Β
Some of the first claims of fraudΒ arose in 2015, and focused on day care centers that local authorities accused of overbilling state welfare agencies. This gave rise to an early instance of right-wing outrage, when a local Fox affiliate in 2018 speculated that hundreds of millions of dollars were being stolen from the program and sent to terrorists in Africa. State officialsΒ foundΒ that claim to be baseless.Β
In 2021, feds began investigating fraud claims connected to a child nutrition program. By early 2022, the FBIΒ seized propertyΒ from a nonprofit called βFeeding Our Future.β The revelation of the investigation prompted bipartisan outrage toward the fraudsters; Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), for example,Β questioned the U.S. Department of AgricultureΒ about the misuse of funds, asking about the investigation and steps that could be taken to prevent βfraudulent misuse of federal funding meant to feed hungry childrenβ in the future.Β
In September 2022, the Department of JusticeΒ announced federal criminal chargesΒ against a network of people connected to Feeding Our Future, alleging they defrauded the government of $250 million in federal child nutrition funding, using the funds instead for mansions, cars and other lavish personal expenses. Former Attorney General Merrick Garland said the indictments represented βthe largest pandemic relief fraud schemeβ to date. At the time, 47 people were indicted, many, but not all of whom, were members of the Minnesota Somali community. State Republicans began pointing a finger at the governor.
The scandal continued to unfold. Even the ensuing criminal proceedings were rife with corruption, with one juror dismissed after fraud defendants tried to bribe the juror with aΒ literal bag of cash. The Feeding Our Future scheme has proven vast and deep. BetweenΒ 2023Β and 2025,Β more indictmentsΒ came down connected to the case, with theΒ 78th person indictedΒ this past November. It has become the poster child for Minnesotaβs tangled fraud network that has so far extended to autism services, Medicaid fraud, addiction services and housing..
The state has also investigated the network. In August 2023, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison charged 18 people with defrauding Medicaid of $9.5 million withΒ fake home health care businesses. Ellison in December 2023 announced charges in what his office called the largest Medicaid fraud case it had investigated. Three people were charged in anΒ $11 million prosecution. A June 2024Β state auditΒ found the Minnesota Department of Education had received dozens of complaints about the nonprofit and failed to oversee the distribution of the $250 million at the heart of the case.
The Politics of the Scandals
State RepublicansΒ continued to use the fraud investigations and indictments as evidence of Walzβs unfit leadership. When Walz became Kamala Harrisβs vice presidential candidate in August 2024, the governor became a punching bag forΒ Republicans in the stateΒ running for local and national office. On the Hill, House RepublicansΒ subpoenaed WalzΒ for information about his actions and responsibilities related to the Feeding Our Future scheme.
ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA β JANUARY 5: Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks during a press conference at the State Capitol building on January 5, 2026 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Walz announced today that he is abandoning his re-election campaign for governor, blaming scrutiny from President Donald Trump for his decision. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)
In September 2025,Β eight people were chargedΒ in a multi-million dollar housing fraud scheme for a state program that used Medicaid funds for certain housing services. Then-Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Joseph Thompson called the indictments βthe first wave of charges in a massive fraudβ program. The abused housing program was dissolved in late October.
In addition to the political advantages of blaming the Democratic governor, some conservatives exploited the fact that most of theΒ people implicatedΒ in each of the fraud investigations were members of MinnesotaβsΒ Somali community. That became paramount when Trump and prominent members of the MAGA-sphere got involved.Β
Trump Grabs the Story
On Nov. 19, City Journal, a publication produced by the conservative New York think tank The Manhattan Institute published a post co-authored by Chris Rufo, the notorious anti-woke crusader who is also a fellow at the think tank. The report alleged Minnesota fraudsters were wiring their spoils to a Somalia-based terrorism organization called Al-Shabaab, citing βfederal counterterrorism sources.β Two days later, news website and television station The National News Desk β owned by the conservative Sinclair Broadcast group β covered the City Journal report. Those posts may have been what caught the presidentβs eye. Two hours after The National News Desk report was published, Trump posted about the Minnesota fraud investigations on Truth Social. βMinnesota, under Governor Waltz, is a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity,β Trump wrote, misspelling the governorβs name. In the same post, he said he was removing a special immigration status that covers about 700 Somalian people in the U.S., and introduced the idea that βSomali gangs are terrorizingβ Minnesotans.
The Truth Social posts marked the beginning of a far-right frenzy that has seen the president and extremist influencers feed off of one another, spinning narratives and pushing policies pulsating with outrage, xenophobia and Islamophobia. On Nov. 29, theΒ New York Times echoedΒ Republican talking points blaming the Somali community for federal funds theft, saying that the βfraud took root in pockets of Minnesotaβs Somali diaspora as scores of individuals made small fortunes.β On Dec. 1, the White House issued a one-pager about the Minnesota situation, repeatedly highlighting the ethnicity of most of the people who had been federally charged and blaming Walz.
Trump on Dec. 2 deployed a first round of ICE agents β about 100 β to Minneapolis and St. Paul toΒ target the Somali community, an official told the New York Times. All the while, legitimate federal investigations continued to play out.
Prosecutor Thompson is now the First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota.Β Appointed by Trump, Thompson has served as a longtime prosecutor. On Dec. 18, heΒ charged five new peopleΒ in the housing program Medicaid fraud scheme. Thompson said more than $9 billion in federal funds may have been stolen from Minnesota.
βThe magnitude cannot be overstated,β Thompson said. βWhat we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes. Itβs staggering, industrial-scale fraud.β
Following this announcement, the total number of people indicted in Minnesota fraud schemes reached 92. Eighty-two of those were of Somali descent, according to the U.S. Attorneyβs Office for Minnesota,Β PBS reported. While a significant share of the scammers are Somali, the number is less than 0.1% of the entire Somali population in Minnesota, where the majority are U.S. citizens, and just about 0.03% of the Somali population nationwide,Β according to U.S. Census Bureau data cited by PBS.
Six days later, a 23-year-old content creator dropped a 43-minute YouTube video that had the effect of planting dynamite in a minefield. In a vague Dec. 26 video, former prankster turned anti-immigrant influencer Nick Shirley visited Minnesota day care and health care centers, demanded people who appeared to work at the centers show him children, and accused the businesses of fraud. Shirley in the video is flanked by two masked men, whom he identifies as his security, and is following a man called David who purports to have papers showing evidence of fraud.Β The Intercept identified DavidΒ as 65-year-old David Hoch, an eccentric, far-right political operative in the state.
It doesnβt matter that claims made in Shirleyβs video remain unfounded, and that it documents nothing untoward.
It also doesnβt seem to matter that the initial, 2018 report linking fraud in Minnesota to a Somalia-based terrorist group was debunked by the state, or that the only named source for the article told theΒ Minnesota Star Tribune he was misquoted. (City Journal told the Star Tribune it stands by its reporting.)
Trump has since early December used the fact that the majority of the defendants in each of these fraud cases were members of the Minnesota Somali community as ammunition, opening a dark new chapter in his signature anti-immigration crackdown.
Layla A. JonesΒ is a reporter for TPM in Washington, D.C., with experience covering government and economic policy, race, culture, and history. She has written for the Philadelphia Inquirer, Billy Penn, WHYY, NPR, and the Philadelphia Tribune, and participated in the Knight-Bagehot Fellowship at Columbia University. She attended Temple University for undergrad.
So much of what is reported is the tRump people trying to hide the truth.Β The fact is true it seems the US tRump government doesn’t want the truth to come out, they don’t want rogue officers investigated, they want to keep lying to the public and running illegal thug operation over the US people.Β There must be some way the local police can find evidence to send to a prosecutor over this event.Β Β Hugs
A day after an Immigration and Customs EnforcementΒ officer shotΒ and killed 37-year-old mother of threeΒ Renee GoodΒ as she tried to drive away on a snowy Minneapolis street, tensions remained high, withΒ dozens of protestersΒ venting their outrage outside of a federal facility thatβs serving as a hub for the Trump administrationβs latest immigration crackdown on a major city.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has not publicly identified the officer who shot Good. But she spoke of anΒ incident last JuneΒ in which the same officer was injured when he was dragged by another driverβs fleeing vehicle. A Homeland Security spokesperson confirmed Noem was referring to an incident in Bloomington, Minnesota.
Court records from that case identify the officer who was dragged and injured as Jonathan Ross.
Court documents say Ross got his arm stuck in a vehicleβs window as a driver fled arrest in Bloomington, Minnesota. The officer was dragged 100 yards (91 meters) and cuts to his arm required 50 stitches.
The Associated Press wasnβt immediately able to locate a phone number or address for Ross, and ICE no longer has a union that might comment on his behalf.
Hereβs what we know:
Videos of the shooting:Β Footage shows an officerΒ approaching an SUV stopped across the middle of the road, demanding the driver open the door and grabbing the handle. The Honda Pilot begins to pull forward, and a different ICE officer standing in front of it pulls his weapon and immediatelyΒ fires at least two shots at close range, jumping back as the vehicle moves toward him. It is unclear from the videos whether the vehicle makes contact with the officer, and there is no indication of whether the woman had interactions with ICE agents earlier. After the shooting, the SUV speeds into two cars parked on a curb before crashing to a stop.
Renee Good:Β She was a U.S. citizen bornΒ in Colorado and appears to have never been charged with anything beyond a traffic ticket. In social media accounts, Macklin Good described herself as a βpoet and writer and wife and mom.β Public records show she had recently lived in Kansas City, Missouri, where she and another woman with the same home address had started a business last year called B. Good Handywork. Trump administration officials painted Good as a domestic terrorist who had attempted to ram federal agents with her car.
Who will investigate?Β The Minnesota agency that investigates officer-involved shootings said it was informed Thursday that the FBI and U.S. Justice Department wouldΒ not work with the agency, effectively ending any role for the state to determine if crimes were committed. Noem said the state has no jurisdiction. Gov. Tim Walz pushed back against theΒ Trump administrationβs decisionΒ to keep the investigation solely in federal hands, emphasizing that it would be βvery, very difficult for Minnesotansβ to accept that an investigation that excludes the state could be fair. Mary Moriarty, the prosecutor in Hennepin County, which includes Minneapolis, said her office is βexploring all optionsβ to determine if a state investigation can proceed.