1. Call for a Confirmation Hearing

Stephen Miller has never faced a Senate confirmation hearing. He holds no Senate-confirmed position, which means he has never been required to answer questions — under oath — about his 900+ emails to white nationalists, his Palantir stock conflict, or his role in fabricating the Pretti narrative.

The Senate Judiciary Committee has oversight of immigration enforcement, DOJ operations, and civil liberties — all areas where Miller exercises de facto control. Demand they hold hearings on Miller's role and require his testimony.

The call:

Capitol Switchboard: (202) 224-3121

Ask for your senator's office. When connected, say:

"I'm calling to ask the Senator to support hearings on the role of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy in directing immigration enforcement, including ICE operations, without Senate confirmation. I believe the Senate Judiciary Committee should require Stephen Miller to testify under oath about his financial conflicts of interest and his role in the Alex Pretti case."

That's it. Calls are logged. Volume matters. 50 calls to one office in a day gets attention. 200 changes the calculation.
Calls are more effective than emails. One call takes 90 seconds.

2. Pressure Republicans Who Broke Ranks

Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) publicly rebuked Miller on the Senate floor, telling him to "get into a lane where he knows what he's talking about or get out of this job." Other Republicans have expressed private concerns. Private concerns don't change policy — public pressure does.

Senators who've shown daylight from Miller:

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) — Public rebuke. Office: (202) 224-6342
Call to thank him and ask him to go further. Positive reinforcement works. Ask him to call for hearings.

If your senator is Republican and has not spoken out, call and ask: "Does the Senator believe an unelected adviser should control immigration policy without Senate confirmation?"
The question itself plants the seed. Staffers report these conversations to the Senator.

3. Share One Story With One Person

Mass sharing on social media is noise. What changes minds is one person sending one story to one person they know — a family member, a coworker, a friend who voted differently.

Which story to share depends on who you're talking to:

For someone who supports law enforcement:
Share the Pretti story. A man who lies about a shooting to cover for botched enforcement isn't pro-law-enforcement — he's using officers as political tools.

For someone concerned about corruption:
Share the Palantir conflict. $250K in stock while directing the agency that awards that company contracts. This is Halliburton 2.0.

For someone who thinks "it's just politics":
Share the leaked emails. 900 messages promoting white nationalist websites. The SPLC put him in the same database as David Duke. This isn't politics.
Every claim on this site links to original reporting. The person you share it with can verify it themselves.

4. Support the Organizations Doing the Work

The facts on this site exist because of investigative journalists and watchdog organizations. Their FOIA lawsuits, ethics complaints, and investigations are what make accountability possible.

Where your money has direct impact:

POGO (Project on Government Oversight) — Exposed the Palantir conflict. Their reporting forced Miller to divest.

American Oversight — Filing FOIA lawsuits to obtain Miller's communications and policy documents.

Democracy Forward — Suing DHS/ICE over enforcement policies Miller directs.

CREW (Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington) — Pursuing ethics complaints on financial conflicts.
These organizations operate on donations. $25 funds a FOIA request.

5. Follow the Investigation

LittleSis maps power relationships in searchable, visualizable form. Miller has 40+ documented connections — to white nationalists, to surveillance contractors, to dark money networks. Explore them. Add what you find.

This site updates daily with new developments. Subscribe below to get notified when news breaks.