Stephen Miller and Other Nativists Seeking to Protect Trump-Era Anti-Immigrant Status Quo
Following the release of the Biden administration鈥檚 immigration plans and priorities, former senior Trump officials such as Stephen Miller and Mark Morgan, who both maintain ties to anti-immigrant hate groups, reentered the public sphere determined to preserve the nativist status quo they left behind. Additionally, the Republican Party has greeted these individuals and their nativist worldviews with open arms.
Many wondered where anti-immigrant Trump administration officials would end up and what they would do. The answers to those questions quickly emerged.
鈥淚f you care about having a sovereign country, if you care about immigration policies that put American workers first, that put American families first, that put American children first, there is only one candidate in this race 鈥 you know it is Mo Brooks,鈥 said Miller, the architect of the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration strategy and infamous child-separation policy, as he stumped for Rep. Mo Brooks, of Alabama鈥檚 5th congressional district, during the launch of Brooks鈥 Senate campaign.
In January, Hatewatch reported on how Rep. Brooks was one of the first elected officials to falsely claim that anti-fascist provocateurs were potentially responsible for the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. This was despite the fact that only a few hours earlier, Rep. Brooks spoke at the 鈥淪ave America鈥 rally, telling attendees, 鈥淭oday is the day American patriots start taking down names and kicking ass.鈥
Last month, the Republican Study Committee (RSC) hosted Miller and Morgan for a presentation on how to mobilize congressional opposition to President Joe Biden's immigration proposal. The RSC consists of 152 Republican members of Congress, making it the largest conservative caucus on Capitol Hill.
Miller鈥檚 inclusion in Rep. Brooks鈥 Senate campaign launch and the meeting between the RSC and Miller and Morgan signals the enduring influence of the Trump administration鈥檚 nativist immigration agenda on the Republican party. During the Trump era, Miller, Morgan and other nativists in the administration succeeded in dismantling the preexisting immigration system and enforced a de facto moratorium on all immigration to the United States by the time Trump left office.
During a White House press briefing on March 1, current Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas best summarized the impact of the Trump administration鈥檚 actions, saying, 鈥淚t takes time to rebuild the system from scratch.鈥
Miller and Morgan played pivotal roles in crafting and implementing, respectively, many of the Trump administration鈥檚 inhumane and punitive immigration policies, including but not limited to the zero-tolerance policy, also known as family separation, the Muslim ban and ending the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.
Throughout his time in the Trump administration, Miller 鈥減urged鈥 government agencies, particularly DHS, of civil servants who were not loyal to his extremist agenda. Unlike many of his colleagues, Morgan strengthened his standing within the former administration because of his loyalty to President Trump and Miller鈥檚 anti-immigrant agenda.
Stephen Miller鈥檚 nativism
According to leaked emails reviewed in a Hatewatch investigation, Miller shared white nationalist and anti-immigrant content with Breitbart News editors in an apparent effort to build an appetite for the types of immigration policies he would help shape as an adviser to Trump. Hatewatch analysis demonstrated the degree to which the same literature, conspiracy theories and policies supported by white nationalist and nativist hate groups influenced Miller鈥檚 views on immigration.
In 2015, Miller shared a link from the white nationalist website VDARE to provide background on story for Breitbart News. Former Breitbart News editor Katie McHugh, who leaked the emails to Hatewatch, also said that Miller referenced the white supremacist website American Renaissance in a phone conversation they had in that same year.
Miller鈥檚 nativist ethos is exemplified in his efforts to cancel the DACA program. In the cache of emails reviewed by Hatewatch, Miller argued that DACA recipients would reshape U.S. demographics by replacing native-born citizens. Nativists and white nationalists share a fundamental belief in the need to preserve the United States鈥 historical white majority.
To Miller, President Biden鈥檚 immigration proposal signals a complete reversal of the anti-immigrant approach taken by the Trump administration.
Prior to his presentation to RSC members, Miller expressed his enmity for the Biden administration鈥檚 immigration plans during an appearance on Fox News. He said, 鈥淚t is the most radical immigration bill ever written, drafted or submitted in the history of this country,鈥 despite the fact that the Trump administration more than 400 immigration-related policy challenges, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
In a Fox News appearance on March 1, Morgan similarly excoriated the Biden administration鈥檚 immigration agenda, leveling baseless accusations about its motives. Morgan claimed, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the goal of this [Biden] administration: Not to protect our borders, not to enforce our laws, but absolutely to exploit them, abuse them and let people illegally in the United States.鈥
Morgan joined anti-immigrant hate group
In February, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), an anti-immigrant hate group founded by white nationalist and eugenicist John Tanton in 1979, announced that Morgan would serve as a senior fellow and additional spokesperson for the organization. From its founding, FAIR has spent decades advocating, at state and federal levels, for severely restrictive immigration policies.
FAIR has called for, among other policy recommendations, repealing DACA, a complete halt to all forms of immigration to the U.S., and an end to birthright citizenship. The four years of President Trump鈥檚 tenure provided FAIR unprecedented access to and influence on federal immigration policy. Hatewatch has previously reported on how former FAIR staffers served in the Trump administration, specifically within DHS.
In speaking about his new role, Morgan stated, 鈥淚 am delighted to be part of the effort to seek out solutions to mitigate the tremendous burden and negative impact of uncontrolled immigration on our country鈥檚 national security and economic prosperity.鈥
Prior to joining the Trump administration, Morgan briefly served as the Chief of Border Patrol under former President Barack Obama. With the incoming Trump administration, Morgan was forced to resign but consistently appeared on Fox News, appearing at least 49 times between January and May 2019, according to Media Matters.
Morgan used the airtime to support the Trump administration鈥檚 anti-immigrant policies, even going as far as defending the human rights abuses inflicted on caged migrant children. During an interview with Fox News鈥檚 host Tucker Carlson on April 4, 2019, Morgan suggested that U.S. Border Patrol 鈥渟hould be applauded for what she [Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez] is talking about, cages.鈥
Shortly thereafter, former President Trump named Morgan as the acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a role he held from early to mid-2019. He then served as the acting commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) until the start of the Biden administration in January.