February 14, 2026

Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views

011420-01-Immigration-Miller
Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views

Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views
Photo illustration by SPLC. (Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

He went against many Republicans when siding with white nationalists and other extremists on DACA.


Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views

By Michael Edison Hayden


In emails to Breitbart News leaked to Hatewatch, Miller said DACA recipients would contribute to altering the countryโ€™s demographics by replacing Americans born in the United States. White nationalists often promote the idea of the โ€œgreat replacementโ€ in their propaganda. Manifestos linked to terror suspects have cited this idea to justify acts of violence.

Anti-immigrant groups created by the late John Tanton also have advanced the theory of demographic replacement, including the Center for Immigration Studies, the Federation for American Immigration Reform and NumbersUSA.

Miller discussed the subject of DACA as it relates to demographic replacement in a March 10, 2015, email while criticizing former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, then widely expected to be a top GOP candidate for president in 2016. Miller condemned his fellow Republicans on the subject of immigration and also birthright citizenship, which the 14th Amendment grants to those born or naturalized in the United States. Far-right extremists want to eliminate birthright citizenship outright.

โ€œDemanding DREAMers be given citizenship because they โ€˜know no other home.โ€™ That principle is an endorsement of perpetual birthright citizenship for the foreign-born,โ€ Miller wrote in the email, using a term to describe DACA recipients. โ€œNot only will the U.S.-born children of future illegal immigrants and guest workers be made automatic U.S. citizens, but their foreign-born children will too because, as [former Republican House Majority Leader Eric] Cantor said, โ€˜Our country was founded on the principle.โ€™โ€

Miller added in the same thread: โ€œJeb [Bush] has mastered the art of using immigration rhetoric to sound โ€˜moderateโ€™ while pushing the most extremist policies.โ€ In a follow-up email, Miller referred to Bushโ€™s desire to use โ€œimmigration to replace existing demographics.โ€

Miller similarly brought up DACA again in a June 29, 2015, email:

โ€œ[President Barack Obamaโ€™s] DACA amnesty remains in effect, which provides illegal youth (one of the single strongest pull factors for entering and remaining illegally) with both work permits and generous free cash tax credits,โ€ Miller wrote to Katie McHugh, then a Breitbart editor, with the subject line โ€œThe Immigration Surge,โ€ warning of the growing โ€œforeign-born shareโ€ of Americaโ€™s workforce.

McHugh leaked more than 900 emails to Hatewatch that Miller sent to her from March 2015 to June 2016 to help expose what she described as the โ€œevilโ€ underpinnings of President Donald Trumpโ€™s immigration policies. These include rescinding DACA and separating children as young as 4 months old from their parents at the border. McHugh said she was fired from Breitbart for publishing anti-Muslim tweets. While working for Breitbart, she was enmeshed in Americaโ€™s far-right, anti-immigrant movement, but she has since renounced those views.

Miller was an aide to then-U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions when most of the emails were sent. Miller has not responded to multiple requests for comment, and the White House called the Southern Poverty Law Center a โ€œlong-debunked far- left smear organizationโ€ after the series on his emails began to run. Breitbart News dismissed Hatewatchโ€™s reports on the emails by saying that โ€œit is not exactly a newsflash that political staffers pitch stories to journalists.โ€

Hatewatch previously reported that Miller showed an apparent interest in writers such as Jared Taylor and Jason Richwine, who have argued that Latinos are predisposed to lower IQs than whites, and that he treated nonwhite immigration with contempt throughout his correspondences with McHugh and Breitbart.

In a November 2015 email that Hatewatch has not previously published, Miller forwarded an interview with Phyllis Schlafly from far-right conspiracy website WorldNetDaily that argued undocumented immigrants should be shipped out on trains to โ€œscare out the people who want to undo our country.โ€

In a July 2015 email, Miller sent an article to McHugh highlighting Fox News founder Rupert Murdochโ€™s criticism of Trumpโ€™s anti-immigrant rhetoric with the subject line โ€œdon’t believe your lying eyes.โ€

Miller quoted from Murdochโ€™s Twitter account as stating, โ€œMexican immigrants, as with all immigrants, have much lower crime rate than native born.โ€

โ€œActually, no,โ€ Miller responded in an email to McHugh. He included an article by Richwine arguing it was time to โ€œlift the tabooโ€ on talking about his belief that Latino immigrants are less likely than whites to be upwardly mobile.

Undoing DACA and the ‘Manichean worldview’

Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views
Former Florida Governor and onetime Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush talks with the press after a house party in Dover, New Hampshire, on March 13, 2015. (Photo by Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images)

Obama, who broke records in deporting undocumented immigrants, created DACA in a 2012 executive branch memorandum as a way to protect from deportation undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children. Many mainstream conservatives oppose the program โ€“ not out of fears of a โ€œgreat replacementโ€ โ€“ but because they believe Obamaโ€™s move to be unconstitutional.

Despite that opposition, DACA is widely perceived as having strong bipartisan support. It gives recipients an ability to work in the United States legally and obtain driverโ€™s licenses.

Every two years, recipients of DACA must submit renewal applications and meet a series of requirements related to education. They must avoid criminal offenses to stay in the United States. When polled in 2017, nearly two-thirds of Republicans wanted an agreement reached on DACA that would go even further than Obamaโ€™s program โ€“ offering recipients a pathway to citizenship.

Trump announced a plan to terminate DACA on Sept. 5, 2017, noting that โ€œyoung Americans have dreams too.โ€ White nationalists and other far-right supporters of the president loudly praised his move. The white nationalist website VDARE published the headline โ€œThere is no such thing as a โ€˜deserving DREAMerโ€™โ€ on the day Trump acted. (Miller had linked to VDARE in an October 2015 email to McHugh.)

The neo-Nazi website Daily Stormer published Trumpโ€™s remarks on the subject in full โ€“ along with an illustration of him as a warrior, decorated with skulls and draped with the U.S. and Confederate flags.

In the coming months, the Supreme Court is expected to rule on the fate of the estimated 700,000 to 800,000 DACA recipients who have been living and working in the United States since childhood. Ted Olson, a former solicitor general under President George W. Bush, represents DACA recipients in the Supreme Court case, underscoring bipartisan efforts to protect them.

Economists, including some conservatives, have praised DACA for stimulating entrepreneurship and reportedly adding billions of dollars in revenue to the economy. But Christopher Parker, a political science professor at the University of Washington who has written extensively on civil rights issues, told Hatewatch that the Republican Party will no longer compromise on bills that are โ€œreally, really conservative by any stretch of the imaginationโ€ because its base is focused on a perceived loss of social status related to race.

โ€œThey want to maintain their social prestige in America,โ€ Parker told Hatewatch, referring to Miller and his allies. โ€œThis is not about economics anymore. They know about the economic data, but they just donโ€™t [care].โ€

Parker describes this attitude as a โ€œManichean worldview,โ€ or extreme two-sidedness without nuance โ€“ a world of black and white. According to Parker, the same animus that drives Republicans away from cutting a deal with Democrats on DACA also keeps them from speaking out about Millerโ€™s interest in racist authors and issues related to white nationalism.

โ€œThey see America as inexorably slipping away from them, and Stephen Miller epitomizes this,โ€ Parker said. โ€œThey see whatโ€™s happening with DACA as them losing their country [to nonwhite people]. And because they have embraced his Manichean worldview, they wonโ€™t compromise on anything.โ€

Nearly 150 Democratic politicians have called for Millerโ€™s ouster since Hatewatch first reported on his emails on Nov. 12, according to a tally by HuffPostโ€™s Christopher Mathias, who has been covering the response to Hatewatchโ€™s series . But Republicans have mostly remained silent, choosing to avoid the topic of white nationalism altogether. U.S. Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, as a Democrat, condemned white supremacy in the context of Hatewatchโ€™s report in a Nov. 25 tweet . Van Drew switched parties and became a Republican during the debate over Trump’s impeachment.

Whatโ€™s at stake for DACA recipients

Miller Dismisses DACA in Emails, Mirroring Extremist Views
Students and supporters of DACA rally in downtown Los Angeles, California, on Nov. 12, 2019. (Photo by Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images)

Itโ€™s unclear what will happen to DACA recipients if the Supreme Court allows the Trump administration to end the program. But one thing is certain: They will be at risk for immediate deportation.

DACA recipient Marisol Estrada, 25, is a Georgia-based employee at an immigration law firm. Estradaโ€™s family moved to Savannah from Mexico when she was 5, she told Hatewatch.

โ€œItโ€™s a disservice to the country to have me deported because I benefit this country,โ€ she said, responding to the views of Miller and others. โ€œThis is the only country I know as home, and I would never do anything to harm it.โ€

Estrada graduated from high school with an international baccalaureate diploma, giving her a head start of 25 college credits. She later attended Georgia Southern University and plans to go to law school. By almost any measure, she is a symbol of DACAโ€™s success.

Estrada told Hatewatch that she attended one Young Republicans meeting before finding that some members were too extreme in their attitudes about people of color.

โ€œWith Millerโ€™s extreme views, I think itโ€™s dangerous,โ€ Estrada said, referring to the mass shooting in August at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas. โ€œIt allows for white nationalist-identified people to act on their hateful thoughts. We see examples of that in El Paso. I see that in my everyday life.โ€


Originally published by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), 01.14.2020, republished for educational, non-commercial purposes.