· 2d · on MSN
Stephen Miller calls out White House press for ignoring Biden’s decline, gives ‘civics lesson’ on presidential power
‘THIS!’ Stephen Miller delivers media whining about ‘unelected’ Musk a masterclass in civics
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller to a blowtorch to media members who’ve been whining about Elon Musk having a role in cleaning up government […]
Stephen Miller gives 'civics lesson' to reporters over Elon Musk's role
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller gave reporters a "civics lesson" on presidential powers amid concerns about Elon Musk serving as an "unelected bureaucrat".
Let's calm down,” the CNN anchor had to repeatedly tell the top Trump White House adviser after he started shouting live on air.
White House aide Stephen Miller appeared more calm and collected during a Friday night interview with Fox News after going nuclear on CNN earlier in the week. Miller got himself so worked up on Tuesday chatting with CNN anchor Brianna Keilar that she literally had to tell him to “calm down” as he railed against critics of Elon Musk’s DOGE amid ongoing federal cuts.
The Gateway Pundit's White House correspondent Jordan Conradson gave a fawning question to Stephen Miller at Thursday's press briefing.
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) will restore “faith and confidence” in the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Miller
Senior officials have been blindsided by DOGE’s actions at Treasury and USAID. But the president’s support of the group means other advisers have limited options.
Democratic lawmakers are fighting DOGE's plans to access IRS data over fears it could be used to politically target Americans.
Finding #1: Elon Musk is government-funded. USAID spent $3 million on Elon’s Starlink terminals. And the federal government gave him close to $5 billion in Tesla subsidies. In total, Elon’s companies receive over $15 billion in government contracts.
President Donald Trump is going further than ever before to enforce his decisions. While orders were sometimes softened or even ignored during his first term, this time he's unwilling to let things slide.
President Donald Trump and Elon Musk are considering a proposal to issue checks to taxpayers based on savings from the Department of Government Efficiency.
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