By David M. Drucker
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
The political fallout from President Donald Trump’s mass
deportation program has damaged his job approval ratings, led to the firing of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, and
prompted the White House to urge Republicans in Congress to abandon the issue and instead tout administration efforts
to remove criminal aliens.
But the main architect of mass deportations, Stephen
Miller, remains the White House deputy chief of staff because of his
unquestionable loyalty to Trump and personal popularity among GOP voters. Few
if any Republicans in Washington, D.C.—elected officials, lobbyists or
operatives—are demanding Miller’s ouster, or even that immigration be removed
from his portfolio. That’s despite the boost the mass deportation operation has
given to the Democratic Party’s bid to recapture the House of Representatives and
Senate in midterm elections.
A key reason why: The White House aide enjoys a following
all his own inside the GOP.
“He’s the Holy Grail of MAGA,” a Republican lobbyist told
The Dispatch, requesting anonymity to speak candidly, as did most who
were interviewed for this story. “He’s the true north of MAGA for the
president.” In a January Quinnipiac
University poll, Trump’s job approval among Republican voters was 88
percent. Miller scored an impressive 73 percent rating in the same survey.
John Fredricks, a conservative talk radio host and a
Trump supporter since the president first sought the GOP nomination a decade
ago, has known Miller for 15 years. He explained Miller’s rise in the Make
America Great Again movement, and White House staying power, to The Dispatch
this way: “He’s got balls and a plan—most people have one without the other.
He’s got them both, and you can quote me on this. He’s got balls and he’s got a
plan. And that’s why he is revered within MAGA.”
“Stephen Miller is the guy, that if he were to leave the
administration, everybody would doubt the sincerity of the other administration
people,” Fredricks, who is based in Washington, D.C., added.
Many Republicans who work in the nation’s capital view
Miller with “a combination of admiration and hate, but mostly fear,” a second
GOP lobbyist said. This party insider added that Miller’s adept management of
his close relationship with Trump is among the reasons the long knives haven’t
come for Miller the way they did Noem, a Senate-confirmed Cabinet secretary,
and others who have been in the president’s orbit as long as he has.
“He operates in a fiefdom with almost unlimited power and
he’s smart enough not to overstep—a very
dangerous combination for such an opportunistic hardliner,” this lobbyist said.
That keen sense to avoid big-footing Trump has made
Miller an elusive figure for many Republican professionals in Washington. Even
Republican lobbyists supportive of the president, or at least not openly
hostile, have told The Dispatch they have had no interaction with
Miller, despite his broad sway over domestic and foreign policy. “Stephen is
way more focused internally than externally,” a GOP operative said. However,
this experience is not universal.
Miller has been in town, and involved in Republican
politics for years. He has relationships that predate Trump. And so some
Republicans with business or concerns related to the administration’s agenda
have, from time to time, used Miller as a high-level White House conduit. Given
Miller’s deep involvement in immigration policy, he is often sought after for
help on that issue. “People backchannel to Miller all the time,” a Republican
who works on K Street said. “The consensus is, unless immigration-related, it
usually isn’t a useful backchannel.”
Miller, 40, is something of a MAGA wunderkind.
Well before Trump first campaigned on a platform of
securing the border and limiting immigration—both legal and illegal—Miller was
making a name for himself fighting the fight on Capitol Hill. In 2013, Miller
was a communications aide to then-Sen. Jeff Sessions, an Alabama Republican. As
many Republicans in Congress negotiated with Democrats to pass a bipartisan
overhaul of federal immigration law, Miller worked furiously to kill the
legislation and at times seemed more emotionally invested in the legislation’s
defeat than Sessions. (The bill cleared the Senate but died in the House.)
During Trump’s 2016 campaign, Sessions was among the
first congressional Republicans to endorse, precipitating Miller’s move to the populist
candidate’s campaign and eventually, Trump’s first White House. Throughout that
period and in the years since, Miller’s power in Trump’s circle, and his
stature in the MAGA movement, has grown. He played a key role in planning
Trump’s second administration during the four years out of power, became a
regular warmup act at the president’s campaign rallies, and now exercises
inordinate influence—far more than his title, deputy chief of staff for
domestic policy, suggests.
This has made Miller a unique force to contend with in
Washington, a phenomenon appreciated by Republican operatives supportive of
Trump.
For instance, one Republican government relations
executive friendly with the White House conceded that Miller is often a
terrible messenger for Trump’s agenda, causing supporters like this individual
to gripe privately among themselves about his television appearances and
preference that he leave on-camera interviews to more capable voices in the
administration. The same is occasionally said of the president. But observe how
Trump and Miller are viewed through a similar lens: “The benefit of the doubt is
given to Trump at every turn—and that applies to Miller,” the government
relations executive said.
Republicans in town who lack the same affection for Trump
tend to find Miller’s political durability frustrating. The generic ballot
gauging which party voters would prefer to be in control of Congress has worsened for Republicans over the past few months,
suggesting the GOP’s 2026 turbulence is at least partially related to the
public backlash against the mass deportation program. While midterm elections
are historically challenging for the president’s party, some Republicans argue
Miller is making matters worse.
“It’s probably time for him to move on. I don’t think
he’s helping the president,” a veteran GOP lobbyist said. “There was a victory
here: Trump sealed the border. Let’s get rid of—using Trump’s words, not mine,
the ‘bad
hombres,’ and call it a day. This is a classic example of snatching defeat
from the jaws of victory.”
The White House did not respond to an email requesting
comment.
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