Stephen Miller blasted activist judges for sabotaging President Trump’s America First agenda. He slammed a federal judge’s block on banning foreign students from Harvard, calling it “judicial tyranny.” Miller warned that radical judges are stealing power from voters who demanded strong borders.
The Trump administration’s common-sense rule would protect American students from being replaced by foreign competition. But left-wing judges keep throwing tantrums to block America’s comeback. Miller vowed Trump won’t let black-robed dictators kill our sovereignty.
These out-of-control judges act like kings, not public servants. One extremist in a robe can halt policies millions voted for. Miller called it an attack on democracy itself – letting un-elected activists override the people’s president.
The far left knows they can’t win elections, so they weaponize the courts. They’re using lawfare to push open borders and erase national identity. Miller promised Trump will keep appointing judges who respect the Constitution, not globalist nonsense.
Fake “civil rights” groups cheer these lawless rulings to flood America with illegal immigrants. They want to replace hardworking citizens with cheap labor and future Democrat voters. Miller said patriots see through this scheme to rig elections forever.
Weak Republicans used to let judges walk all over them. Not Trump. Miller praised the president for fighting back against judicial dictators trying to impose Marxism. Real Americans want action, not endless liberal stalling tactics.
The Supreme Court must rein in these rogue lower courts disrespecting voter mandates. Miller urged Congress to pass laws stripping activist judges of their stolen powers. Trump built the wall – now he’ll build a firewall around our democracy.
Every time a judge blocks Trump, it proves why we need four more years of MAGA strength. Miller’s message is clear: the silent majority won’t be silenced by radical judges. Tune into NEWSMAX for fearless coverage standing up for truth, freedom, and the American way.

