Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and architect of some of the Trump administration’s most hardline immigration policies, has listed his Arlington home for $3.75 million — just two years after buying it for $2.875 million.
Miller and his wife, podcaster Katie Miller, appear to have quietly fled the neighborhood in recent weeks. Neighbors say they were spotted moving out, and the house officially hit the market on October 7, according to ARLnow. The exit comes after several rounds of peaceful chalk protests on the sidewalk outside their home, with messages like “Stephen Miller is destroying democracy,” “stop the kidnapping,” and “no white nationalism” scrawled in bold letters.
While the chalk eventually washed away, the tension apparently didn’t. Katie Miller lashed out on social media: “To the ‘Tolerant Left’ who spent their day trying to intimidate us in the house where we have three young children: We will not back down. We will not cower in fear. We will double down. Always, For Charlie.”
Stephen Miller went a step further, calling the chalk messages “terroristic threats” during an appearance on The Sean Hannity Show.
The home listing paints a very different picture from the chaos the Millers described: six bedrooms, 6.5 baths, and “luxury living at its finest,” all wrapped in “comprehensive security.” What’s less clear is how a man with no private-sector resume, no known business ventures, and no discernible talent outside of writing xenophobic policy memos, ended up in a multimillion-dollar property in one of Arlington’s wealthiest enclaves.
Public service, after all, doesn’t usually come with a luxury real estate portfolio. But for Stephen Miller — who has managed to parlay his time in Washington into a career of right-wing influence — it seems the grift pays well.