Stephen Miller urged to sue CNN for defamation after being called white supremacist

By 
 August 27, 2025

Whenever the left wants to distract people from a valid argument made by a conservative, they like to pull out their favorite slur: white supremacist.

MAGA loyalist and Turning Point USA leader Charlie Kirk says enough is enough: he's urging President Donald Trump aide Stephen Miller to sue CNN after a panelist on their network called him a white supremacist during a discussion about Trump's D.C. crackdown.

"Any time that we play something from Stephen Miller, it would be journalistic integrity to point out that he is a white supremacist and he is the brainchild behind this policy," former MSNBC host Tiffany Cross told CNN host Abby Phillips.

"That's not my opinion. That's an actual fact. And for him to purport lies from the Oval Office as a white supremacist, it should be pointed out," she added.

"Saving mostly black lives"

Kirk countered Cross's argument, pointing out that the D.C. crackdown is helping everyone, not just white people.

"CNN’s Tiffany Cross called Stephen Miller a white supremacist last night on live television. Why? Because he’s helped architect a crackdown on DC crime that’s saving mostly black lives," Kirk wrote on X

"I hope he sues her for defamation."

No doubt, it sticks in the craw of everyone on the left to see the crackdown working when they have argued so hard against it.

"They're wearing jewelry again"

Miller surely angered the far left media by championing Trump's strategy of deploying the National Guard and federal law enforcement to the area to get violent crime under control.

On Monday, Miller said about the people of D.C., "For the first time in their lives, they can use the parks, they can walk on the streets. You have people who can walk freely at night without having to worry about being robbed or mugged."

"They're wearing their watches again. They're wearing jewelry again. They're wearing purses again," he continued.

Is it overkill?

More than 1,000 arrests have been made in D.C. since the crackdown started earlier this month.

Half of those arrested were illegal immigrants, many of which will now be deported and permanently off the streets of D.C. Around 2,000 National Guard troops have been deployed to D.C., which seems like overkill. But maybe that's the point.

Miller has not said whether he is considering suing the network at this point.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson