Norms Impact
Stephen Miller a ‘big problem’ for Trump administration, says Republican senator
A sitting senator says an unelected White House adviser is “calling the shots,” a warning sign that cabinet accountability is being bypassed inside federal power.
Mar 8, 2026
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
Republican Senator Thom Tillis said White House adviser Stephen Miller “should go” and described him as a “big problem” in the Trump administration. Tillis said Miller exerts “outsized influence” over cabinet operations, constraining cabinet members’ independence and shaping administration actions. The practical consequence is further concentration of operational control in an unelected adviser during a high-stakes immigration crackdown and related federal law-enforcement controversy.
Reality Check
When operational control shifts from Senate-confirmed officials to unelected advisers, our system loses a core accountability channel: public, confirmable responsibility for federal actions. Normalizing “outsized influence” behind closed doors weakens cabinet independence and blurs who can be held to account for enforcement decisions and cross-government directives. That precedent concentrates executive power in roles designed to advise, not govern, eroding democratic guardrails that rely on transparent authority and answerable decision-makers.
Legal Summary
The article alleges significant behind-the-scenes influence by a White House adviser over cabinet operations and policy direction, which raises internal governance and potential ethics concerns. It does not allege any financial exchange, personal benefit, or specific unlawful act tied to that influence, making this primarily a political/ethical issue rather than a prosecutable corruption pattern on the stated facts.
Legal Analysis
<h3>5 C.F.R. Part 2635 — Standards of Ethical Conduct (undue influence / misuse of position)</h3><ul><li>Article alleges a White House adviser (Stephen Miller) has an "outsized influence over the operations of the cabinet," with cabinet members allegedly doing less of what they want due to his "direction," suggesting potential undue influence concerns within executive-branch decisionmaking.</li><li>Claims that Miller "calling the shots" and acting "too quickly" causing "embarrassments" describes internal governance/management issues, but does not allege personal enrichment, bribery, or a transactional exchange.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 371 — Conspiracy (general)</h3><ul><li>No facts in the article indicate an agreement to commit an unlawful act, an overt act tied to a specific crime, or coordination to defraud the United States; allegations are political/operational critiques rather than criminal conspiracy indicators.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 201 — Bribery / Illegal Gratuities (quid pro quo official act)</h3><ul><li>The article contains no allegations of payments, gifts, or anything of value connected to official actions; thus key elements of bribery/gratuities are absent.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The described conduct reflects political/administrative influence and potential ethical/governance concerns, not a money-access-official action alignment indicative of prosecutable structural corruption on the facts provided.
Detail
<p>On CNN’s <strong>State of the Union</strong>, Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina said he believes White House adviser Stephen Miller “should go,” calling Miller’s role in the Trump administration a “big problem.” In response to host Jake Tapper, Tillis said Miller is “more worried about form” than substance and has an “outsized influence over the operations of the cabinet,” which Tillis said results in qualified cabinet members doing less “because of his direction.”</p><p>Tillis said he was the first Republican to call for the resignation or firing of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and affirmed support for Markwayne Mullin as a replacement, arguing Mullin would be independent of Miller’s influence. Tillis said Miller “calling the shots” gave him pause and asserted Miller drove positions including “we should go after Greenland,” and that Miller has been “repeatedly responsible for embarrassments” by acting too quickly.</p><p>Separately, House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries said a leadership change would not reopen the government to resume funding DHS, calling for policy changes and criticizing ICE conduct.</p>