Former senior Trump adviser Stephen Miller is attempting to distance himself and the organization he founded, America First Legal, from Project 2025, a sprawling initiative to provide policy and staffing for a future Republican president, even though Miller appeared in a recruitment video for the effort.
Additionally, AFL’s general counsel, Gene Hamilton, wrote a chapter for Project 2025’s policy book on proposed overhauls of the Department of Justice.
On July 12, ABC News reported that Miller said in a statement: “I have zero involvement with Project 2025. Zero. None. I made an advice video a long while back for students. I have no involvement with the project whatsoever."
Until recently, America First Legal, which bills itself as a conservative answer to the American Civil Liberties Union, was one of the more than 100 right-wing groups listed on Project 2025’s advisory board. The effort is spearheaded by conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation and serves as a blueprint for a potential second Trump administration to advance an extreme right-wing agenda and remake the federal government.
Miller appears to be taking his cues from former President Donald Trump, who recently attempted to distance himself from Project 2025 following increased public scrutiny. Both Trump and Miller have extensive ties to Project 2025, their recent comments notwithstanding.
Miller appeared in a Project 2025 promotional video for its Presidential Administration Academy, an effort to recruit MAGA activists into government service, which was posted on September 20, 2023. His role in the video is short, limited only to stating his title: “senior adviser to the President.” He’s flanked in the video by Project 2025’s nearly 900-page policy book, titled Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise.