Stephen Miller’s Wife Crashes Out, Threatens To Revoke Citizenship Of Panel Guest For Insulting Her During Debate

Katie MIller threatened to revoke the citizenship of a critic during a live TV interview.


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Katie Miller, a former White House staffer and the wife of Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, has more in the spotlight in the second Trump Administration, including the launch of a podcast and TV interviews.

This week, she drew attention by appearing to threaten the citizenship of commentator Cenk Uygur during an appearance on Piers Morgan’s show. 

On the show, which had four guests arguing at all times, Uygur first accused Miller of lying, which Miller strangely interpreted as “racist, bigoted rhetoric against my husband, against my family, and against my children… I am raising Jewish children in this country.”

“Who brought your children into this?,” Uygur asked. “What a weirdo.”

After noting that Uygur had stated “the Millers lie,” Katie Miller asked, “Is that not coded language, for therefore we are Jewish?”

After the rest of the panel reacted incredulously to this odd weaponization of antisemitism, Miller appeared to threaten Cenk’s citizenship.

“You’d better check your citizenship application and hope that everything was legal and correct,” Miller said. She went on to compare him to Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), whom President Donald Trump has repeatedly talked about wanting to deport to her native Somalia.

“It’s deeply ironic that the people who claimed to champion free speech are now trying to deport people who speak out against them,” Uygur later told HuffPost. “If Princess Snowflake tries to deport everyone she loses a debate to, then we’re going to start to run out of people.”

Uygur was born in Turkey and came to the United States as a child, and is a longtime U.S. citizen. He is not a “natural-born citizen,” which came up when he briefly talked about running for president in 2023, but was therefore ineligible.

Photo courtesy of an X screenshot. 


Stephen Silver
Stephen Silver is an award-winning journalist, essayist and film critic, and contributor to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Broad Street Review and Splice Today. The co-founder of the Philadelphia Film Critics Circle, Stephen lives in suburban Philadelphia with his wife and two sons. Stephen has authored thousands of articles that focus on politics, technology, and the economy.

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