Stephen Miller, President-elect Trump's deputy chief of staff, is asserting himself as the key player in the White House's plan to pass Trump's sweeping agenda through Congress. Why it matters: Trump trusts Miller implicitly,
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
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.
President-elect Donald Trump is planning a string of executive orders during his first days in office, including one to strip job protections from career civil servants.
According to a report, five of the 10 executive orders are focused on the southern border, an issue that Trump hammered on the campaign trail last year.
The New York Times journalist also predicted what's to come from the anti-immigration hard-liner during Donald Trump's second term.
President-elect Trump's top aide on immigration and the border spoke with House Republicans during a roughly hour-long meeting Wednesday. Lawmakers who left the room hailed Stephen Miller, who was ...
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,
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.
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.
Congressional Republicans are also gearing up to enact major changes for government workers, including cuts to employee benefits
He's at the apex of power now. Every month that goes by, he has a little bit less.” Click here to order your copy of this issue If you want to know how a candidate will govern, the clues are often in how they campaigned.