Tools
Change country:

Elon Musk is on a collision course with Stephen Miller

A line of men in various suits, and one blond woman, file down the stairs of a private jet as they exit it. Elon Musk (second from left) and Stephen Miller (third from left) arrive with President-elect Donald Trump’s advisers on November 13, 2024, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland. | Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

A bitter public feud split the MAGA movement over the holidays, as supporters of high-skilled legal immigration like Elon Musk argued vociferously (and sometimes profanely) with the right’s immigration critics over the topic of H-1B visas.

Musk, like many tech executives, strongly supports that program, which lets companies bring skilled foreign workers to the US for specific jobs — indeed, Musk said he once had such a visa himself. Critics on the right have long argued that it suppresses wages for American workers, while proponents say it attracts top talent and helps American businesses succeed.

“The reason I’m in America along with so many critical people who built SpaceX, Tesla and hundreds of other companies that made America strong is because of H1B. Take a big step back and FUCK YOURSELF in the face,” Musk posted on X. “I will go to war on this issue the likes of which you cannot possibly comprehend.”

That particular missive was aimed at an X poster with a small following. And yet Musk’s real nemesis on the issue is someone with far more power, influence, and bureaucratic savvy: Stephen Miller.

Miller is the hardline anti-immigration ideologue who effectively oversaw immigration policy for the first Trump administration as a senior White House aide. He spent Trump’s first term mastering the workings of the federal bureaucracy and was one of only a few high-level appointees to remain in the boss’s good graces. In Trump’s second term, he’ll have another high-level role, as deputy White House chief of policy.

As I wrote in a September profile, Miller is the architect of Trump’s mass deportation agenda — but he’s also pushed hard to restrict legal immigration including H-1B visas specifically, despite his boss’s sometimes contradictory impulses on the issue. In Trump’s first term, Miller was tenacious enough that he eventually got his way: The administration cited the pandemic to “temporarily” suspend all H-1B visas while crafting rules designed to drastically limit the program.

So while Musk might be encouraged by the broadly positive comments on H-1B visas Trump made to a reporter on Saturday — the president-elect said he’s “been a believer in H-1B” — the real question is: Can Musk win a policy war with Miller?

Why MAGA fans started attacking each other on X over H-1B visas during the holidays

The GOP coalition has long been split on high-skilled immigration. The party’s pro-business faction has supported it, arguing it brings in the best talent and helps American companies succeed and compete globally. But the nativist or populist right opposes it as a plot by cosmopolitan elites to avoid paying American workers. Trump has straddled this divide, often praising H1-B visas, while appointees like Miller worked to limit them. (“Big Tech is replacing Americans,” Miller tweeted last year.)

The divide took on a new dynamic over the summer, when several wealthy tech figures — such as Musk and David Sacks — endorsed Trump. Appearing on All-In, a podcast hosted by Sacks and other venture capitalists, Trump was pressed to promise to expand high-skilled immigration. “I do promise,” Trump said. He also mused (without being asked) that international students graduating from US colleges should “automatically” get a green card to stay and work. (Afterward, his campaign walked this back, saying that only after “aggressive vetting” would “the most skilled graduates who can make significant contributions” be allowed to stay.)

After the election, Trump named Musk and former biotech CEO Vivek Ramaswamy to head the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which will seemingly be some sort of outside advisory body issuing recommendations on how the administration should cut regulations and spending. Trump also named Sacks the “A.I. & Crypto Czar.”

The current brouhaha was kicked off by far-right activist and provocateur Laura Loomer last week, after Trump announced that another venture capitalist, Sriram Krishnan, would join the White House to work on AI policy. Loomer called the appointment “deeply disturbing.” She pointed to a November X post in which Krishnan wrote that “anything to remove country caps for green cards / unlock skilled immigration would be huge,” saying this “is not America First policy.”

From there, the conflict spiraled:

Sacks defended Krishnan, but the attacks from Loomer and her supporters continued, with many taking on an ugly racial or ethnic dynamic (since about 70 percent of recent H-1B recipients have been from India). Loomer denounced “third-world invaders from India,” said “our country was built by white Europeans,” and asked “why are people in India still shitting in the water they bathe and drink from?” Musk got involved, insisting “there is a permanent shortage of excellent engineering talent,” calling this “the fundamental limiting factor in Silicon Valley.” He also issued the aforementioned “FUCK YOURSELF in the face” post and promised to “go to war on this issue the likes of which you cannot possibly comprehend.” Former Trump White House adviser Steve Bannon called Musk a “toddler” who needs a “wellness check” from Child Protective Services and said there should be “zero H-1B visas.”

Eventually, Ramaswamy joined the fray in a lengthy X post, arguing that the reason “top tech companies often hire foreign-born & first-generation engineers over ‘native’ Americans” is that “American culture has venerated mediocrity over excellence for way too long.” He condemned the idea of valuing “the jock over the valedictorian” and criticized American cultural products like the TV shows Boy Meets World and Friends — praising instead the 2014 film Whiplash, which portrayed an instructor’s psychological abuse of a jazz drummer aspiring to artistic greatness (directed by Ramaswamy’s Harvard University classmate).

As for Miller, he has not weighed in explicitly. But later on the day of Ramaswamy’s post, Miller posted on X, without explanation, excerpts from a 2020 speech when Trump praised the culture and achievements of the American people, calling them “the most adventurous and confident people ever to walk the face of the Earth.”

Some on the nativist right, like Bannon, interpreted Miller’s post as a rebuttal to Ramaswamy — and a reminder of who will really hold power in the White House. Miller, who oversaw the White House speechwriting office, may have had a hand in crafting Trump’s words there — just as he will have a major role in crafting immigration policy in 2025 and likely beyond.

Can Musk supplant Miller?

Now, if you believe what Trump says currently, he’s pro H-1B. “I’ve always liked the visas, I have always been in favor of the visas. That’s why we have them,” Trump told the New York Post on Saturday. “I have many H-1B visas on my properties. I’ve been a believer in H-1B. I have used it many times. It’s a great program,” he continued. (However, the New York Times reported Trump “appears to have only sparingly used” the H-1B — but that his companies had often used the very different H-2 visas for “jobs like cooks, housekeepers, and waiters.”)

But Trump has previously spoken more negatively about the program. “We should end it,” he said in 2016, calling it “very bad for workers.” (“The H-1B program is neither high-skilled nor immigration: These are temporary foreign workers, imported from abroad, for the explicit purpose of substituting for American workers at lower pay,” he said in a campaign statement that March.)

And the biggest problem for Musk and his tech allies is that, if they want H-1B expansion, they’d have to go through Miller, a formidable opponent.

Trump has sent mixed signals on legal immigration, but Miller has made his agenda clear: He wants much less of it. In 2020, when Trump announced “temporary” suspensions on legal immigration during the pandemic, Miller privately told allies this was just the first step in a broader strategy: “The most important thing is to turn off the faucet of new immigrant labor.”

And in contrast to ideological allies like Bannon and Miller’s one-time boss Jeff Sessions, who flamed out of government and lost Trump’s favor, Miller has lasted, becoming a seemingly permanent fixture in Trumpworld — being dubbed “the president of immigration.”

He exerted such vast policy influence in Trump’s first term in part due to his focus on bureaucratic minutia, in part because he could get other appointees fired, in part because he helped craft Trump’s words in prepared speeches, and in part because he was unshakably loyal to the boss and savvy at making alliances with other top officials. But mostly it was because other staffers believed, with good reason, that he and Trump had a mind meld on immigration — that he was speaking for the boss.

So the venture capitalists and tech executives who have more recently joined Trump’s coalition and hope to be rewarded with their preferred H-1B policy changes will face a challenge getting past Miller. Trump may say things, but it’s Miller who turns those things into policy, and who knows how to slow-walk or squelch proposals he dislikes. So long as Miller holds Trump’s favor, and so long as he remains effectively in charge of immigration policy, betting on restrictionism is the only reasonable bet.

Finally, there’s yet another twist to this messy saga — shortly before this dispute began last week, Trump announced he’d chosen a new appointee to join Musk and Ramaswamy at DOGE.

Her name? Katie Miller — Stephen’s wife. “Congratulations to Stephen and Katie!” Trump posted.


Read full article on: vox.com
New Orleans, Las Vegas suspects latest in long line of military radicals
A pair of suspected terrorist attacks on New Year's Day were both allegedly carried out by former U.S. service members.
foxnews.com
Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter: Sugar Bowl will be played after New Orleans terror attack
Receive your weekly recap of all the happenings around the world of sports.
foxnews.com
NY Times reporter who interviewed New Orleans terror suspect years ago says he saw no 'red flags'
A New York Times contributor interviewed Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the suspect behind the New Orleans terror attack, ten years ago and discussed his recollections.
foxnews.com
Cybertruck Driver Had Gunshot Wound to Head Before Explosion: Sheriff
A handgun was reportedly found at the feet of the man who exploded a Tesla vehicle outside a Trump hotel.
newsweek.com
'Lives depend on it': Republicans push for prompt Trump confirmations in wake of New Orleans attack
There is renewed urgency to quickly confirm Kash Patel, Pete Hegseth and Tulsi Gabbard to Trump's Cabinet after the deadly New Year's attack in New Orleans.
foxnews.com
Vegas Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger shot himself in head before explosion, police say
Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger shot himself in the head just before the explosion at the Trump Las Vegas hotel, police said. Metropolitan Police Department Sheriff Kevin McMahill told reporters Thursday that Livelsberger, 37, was found inside the vehicle with a “self-inflicted gunshot wound” to the head. Matthew Livelsberger A gun found in the destroyed vehicle. Matthew Livelsberger...
nypost.com
Nearly 200 ballots went uncounted in Wisconsin and officials want to know why
Wisconsin election officials are launching an investigation into how nearly 200 absentee ballots went uncounted in Madison.
latimes.com
Superdome welcomes Sugar Bowl fans after New Orleans terror attack
College football fans flocked to the Caesars Superdome on Thursday afternoon to get ready for the Sugar Bowl after it was postponed due to the New Orleans terror attack.
foxnews.com
Humpback whale that washed up on LI was popular NYC ‘acrobat’ — and was likely killed in a boat strike, experts say
The young whale was a popular humpback who put on shows for whale watchers this summer -- once tail throwing directly beneath the Verrazano Bridge.
nypost.com
British rapper Stormzy banned from driving for using phone behind wheel of his Rolls-Royce
Stormzy pleaded guilty to the cellphone driving charge. He had previously admitted to a 2023 window-tinting offense and also had a record of speeding.
nypost.com
Bengals' Tee Higgins Listed as Questionable for Matchup vs Steelers
Tee Higgins and Chase Brown are officially questionable for Saturday's game.
newsweek.com
How Ellen DeGeneres Made This 'Bachelorette' Alum Feel 'Stupid'
Ali Fedotowsky claims that Ellen DeGeneres made her feel dumb during an appearance on the comedian's talk show.
newsweek.com
Angel Reese scrubs Instagram account after posting revealing New Year’s outfit
Angel Reese's Instagram account suddenly disappeared Thursday.
nypost.com
We tested the best greens powders, and asked experts whether they really work
Get your greens here!
nypost.com
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo were ‘really f–king honest’ as they negotiated ‘Wicked’ salaries together
Cynthia Erivo compared Ariana Grande to Lucille Ball while praising her "Wicked" performance.
nypost.com
What to know about ISIS, thought to have inspired the New Orleans attacker
Shamsud-Din Jabbar appears to have been inspired by the Islamic State, Biden says. The U.S.-designated terrorist group once controlled swaths of Syria and Iraq.
washingtonpost.com
Here’s How Mike Johnson’s Speakership Bid Could Come Undone
The House must choose a speaker before it can swear in new members and certify Donald J. Trump as the winner of the 2024 presidential election. Last time, it took four days and 15 votes.
nytimes.com
Is a $10,000 1-year CD worth opening for 2025?
If you can afford to temporarily part with the funds, a $10,000 1-year CD could prove valuable for 2025. Here's why.
cbsnews.com
Deep freeze hit housing market in December with strongest seasonal slowdown in 2 years
As temperatures plummeted over the festive season, so did the level of activity in the residential real estate market.
nypost.com
Browns Will Have Deshaun Watson Compete For Starting Quarterback Role in 2025: Report
The Cleveland Browns plan to keep Deshaun Watson around in 2025, but he will reportedly be competing for the starting quarterback role.
newsweek.com
New Israeli airstrikes in Gaza humanitarian zone and elsewhere kill at least 26
Hundreds of thousands of displaced people were huddling in a Gazi humanitarian zone when an early morning Israeli airstrike killed at least 10 people.
latimes.com
Waldorf-Astoria worker plummets to his death at long-under-construction luxury hotel: cops
The 45-year-old hardhat was found on the ground around 9:40 a.m. outside the luxury hotel on Park Avenue near East 49th Street that has been under construction for years, according to cops and sources.
nypost.com
Why Vanna White Gave Ryan Seacrest a Hygiene Product for Christmas
'Wheel of Fortune' star Vanna White proves her thoughtful side, surprising her co-host Ryan Seacrest with a gift that left him smiling.
newsweek.com
Madonna Gets Candid About Childhood Tragedy That Forced Her to 'Grow Up Fast'
While growing up in Michigan, Madonna suffered a tragedy that she says likely altered the course of her life.
newsweek.com
These are the least on-time airlines in the world — and one American carrier takes the crown of shame
Delta Air Lines scored the highest among US carriers despite a computer outage that caused thousands of flight cancellations in July.
nypost.com
UFL releases 2025 schedule; Stallions look for another title
The United Football League released its 2025 schedule Thursday. Spring football returns in late March with the Birmingham Stallions looking to defend their title.
foxnews.com
New Orleans 'One of Safest Places on Earth' After Terror Attack: Governor
A 42-year-old U.S. Army veteran from Texas has been named the suspect in the New Year's attack that is being treated as an act of terrorism.
newsweek.com
Economic optimism after Trump election win sparks plastic surgery boom in NYC
New Yorkers buoyed by economic optimism under a second Trump administration are fueling a boom in plastic surgery -- especially breast implants and liposuction, according to a leading Long Island cosmetic surgeon.
nypost.com
6 tips to ‘detox’ after excessive holiday eating and drinking
Eager to look and feel healthier after the holidays? Experts shared with Fox News Digital their tips for getting back to a healthier state after a season of overindulgence.
foxnews.com
Jennifer Lopez Says She Had to 'Hold' Her Family 'Together' Amid 'Challenging Relationships'
Jennifer Lopez, who is in the midst of divorcing Ben Affleck, got candid about how her 'challenging' romances led her to 'hold' her family 'together.'
1 h
newsweek.com
U.K.'s biggest dinosaur footprint site discovered: "So surreal"
It is hoped the discovery will provide clues about how dinosaurs interacted, as well as their size and the speeds at which they moved.
1 h
cbsnews.com
$1 for a house in Italy too good to be true? Yes — but I’ll never regret finding my dream home
Buying a $1 home in Italy might seem like a deal that’s too good to be true; and for one Chicago woman who made it her reality, it was. But she doesn’t regret a thing.
1 h
nypost.com
Zelensky to Boost Post-Assad Syria Relations Amid Russia Pullback
Ukraine is aiming to build up its security and trade relations in the Middle East and says Syria could be a "reliable partner."
1 h
newsweek.com
What we know about the New Orleans attacker who killed at least 14, injured dozens
The FBI revealed more details about Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the man who carried out a terrorist attack on New Year's Day in Louisiana, including apparent comments he made online and more about his days before the attack on New Orleans' Bourbon Street. CBS News' Nicole Sganga has more on the federal investigation.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Ryan Seacrest’s ‘super generous’ gift from Vanna White is quite puzzling — and cheap
“She is an institution, an icon,” he gushed. “She’s amazing. She’s everything you think Vanna White will be when you meet her!”
1 h
nypost.com
Giannis Antetokounmpo, Nikola Jokic Lead First Wave of NBA All-Star Fan Voting
The two former multi-time league MVPs have enjoyed spectacular starts to their 2024-25 seasons.
1 h
newsweek.com
Human Remains Found Near Site of Michigan's Electric Forest Music Festival
The site where the remains were found is the same location where a Detroit-area man vanished while attending the event in 2018.
1 h
newsweek.com
Georgia vs. Notre Dame: How to watch 2024-25 CFP Sugar Bowl for free today
One team will reach the CFP semifinals.
1 h
nypost.com
Watch Live: Las Vegas authorities give updates on Cybertruck explosion
Law enforcement in Las Vegas is addressing the investigation underway into a Tesla Cybertruck that exploded outside of Trump Towers early Wednesday.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Trump to Host Major Rally in DC on Eve of Inauguration
President-elect Donald Trump will hold a rally at the Capitol One Arena on January 19.
1 h
newsweek.com
Ágnes Keleti, Holocaust survivor and the oldest living Olympic medal winner, dies at 103
She won a total of 10 Olympic medals in gymnastics, including five golds, for Hungary at the 1952 Helsinki Games and the 1956 Melbourne Games.
1 h
latimes.com
Gen Z is obsessed with Jellycat plushies — and spending thousands for them: ‘A modern-day Beanie Baby’
“In generations before us, I feel like a childlike essence was taken away really early," one big fan said. "I feel like we’re getting out of older ideas of what it is like being adults.”
1 h
nypost.com
Watch Live: President Biden secures 235 judicial confirmations
President Joe Biden is set to deliver remarks at 2pm EST about the 235 judicial nominees who were confirmed during his tenure as president.
1 h
nypost.com
Social Security's Retirement Age Just Changed: Here's Who's Impacted
The retirement age refers to when seniors are able to receive monthly benefits for the full amount of money they are entitled to.
1 h
newsweek.com
4 restaurants we’re excited to see open in the D.C. area this January
A new downtown deli, barbecue in Bethesda, healthy fast-casual in Chantilly and an Indian street food on H Street.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Pro Wrestling Legend Jeff Jarrett Announces Final Championship Run
The legendary Jeff Jarrett says he's done as an in-ring performer after his contract expires, but he wants one more championship belt.
1 h
newsweek.com
When Does ‘Horizon: An America Saga – Chapter 2’ Come Out?
Part 1 of Kevin Costner's sprawling Western is now streaming on Netflix.
1 h
nypost.com
Is ‘9-1-1’ On Tonight? Here’s When ‘9-1-1’ Season 8 Returns To ABC With New Episodes In 2025
New year, new 9-1-1 episodes.
1 h
nypost.com