Tim Miller (political strategist)

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Tim Miller
Tim Miller at Politics & Prose.jpg
Born (1981-12-25) December 25, 1981 (age 42)
Education George Washington University (BA)
Occupation(s) Political consultant, writer
Known for Jeb Bush 2016 presidential campaign communications director
Republican National Committee spokesman
Never Trump movement
Political party Republican (before 2020)
Independent (2020–present)
SpouseTyler Jameson [1]
Children1

Tim Miller (born December 25, 1981) is an American political commentator, writer and former political consultant. He was spokesman for the Republican National Committee during Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential bid, and communications director for Jeb Bush 2016 presidential campaign. Following Bush's defeat, Miller became an early and prominent Republican critic of Donald Trump. He outlined his reasons for this decision in his 2022 book Why We Did It, which became a New York Times best seller. [2]

Contents

Miller is a writer-at-large for the anti-Trump conservative opinion website The Bulwark , and having succeeded Charlie Sykes in 2023, host for the Bulwark's daily podcast. [3] He contributes as an MSNBC analyst, and has written for magazines such as Rolling Stone and Playboy . [2]

Early life

In 2000, Miller graduated from Regis Jesuit High School in Aurora, Colorado, and in 2004 he graduated from George Washington University with a BA in political science. [4]

McCain and Bush campaigns

A Littleton, Colorado native, Miller started out in Republican politics as an intern working on the 1998 Colorado gubernatorial election. [5] [6] He later earned a bachelor's degree from the George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs. [7]

Miller was an Iowa staffer for John McCain in the 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries, and later served as national press secretary for the Jon Huntsman 2012 presidential campaign. [7] In his role with the Huntsman campaign, Miller was credited by Esquire for making its daily email to reporters "surprisingly hip". [8] After the primary, Miller joined the Republican National Committee as its liaison to Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign. [9]

In 2015, Miller was hired by former Florida governor Jeb Bush to be a senior adviser to his presidential exploratory committee, Right to Rise political action committee (PAC), and went on to serve as the communications director for Bush's presidential campaign. [7] [10] [11] During the campaign, Miller drew notice as a "vocal critic" of Donald Trump. [12] Following a 2016 South Carolina Republican primary debate, Miller followed Trump around the spin room heckling him until Miller was "hip-checked" by Trump campaign strategist Corey Lewandowski. [13]

Anti-Trump advocacy

Miller joined the anti-Trump Our Principles PAC (political action committee) following Bush's exit from the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries, and then drew notice for lambasting Trump supporters with whom he appeared on-air. [14]

Following Trump's election, Miller announced that he had donated to Doug Jones, the Democratic opponent of Republican nominee and accused sex offender Roy Moore in the 2017 United States Senate special election in Alabama to fill Jeff Sessions' seat. [15] [16] In 2020, he co-founded the advocacy organization Republican Voters Against Trump, which sponsored television and internet advertisements featuring lifelong Republicans explaining their rationale for voting for Joe Biden instead of Trump, and served as its political director. [9] [17] He was included in The Washington Post 2016 list of Republicans "who hate Donald Trump the most". [18] In November 2020, he announced he had left the Republican Party. [19] [20]

Miller has been a member of the Definers Public Affairs, an opposition research-styled consulting firm since 2016. The group circulated a research document in 2018 linking anti-Facebook activists with financier George Soros—a frequent subject of antisemitic conspiracy theories—on behalf of Facebook. [21] As a result of the controversy, Facebook ended its relationship with Definers. [22]

Media career

In February 2024, Miller replaced Charlie Sykes as host of The Bulwark Podcast. [23] He is also an MSNBC contributor, [24] a frequent guest on progressive outlet Crooked Media's Pod Save America podcast, [15] [9] [22] and co-hosts a regular series on Brian Tyler Cohen's YouTube channel called Inside The Right. [25]

He is a writer for The Bulwark and Rolling Stone . [9] [26] He has written in support of Omar Ameen, an Iraqi refugee accused by Trump of being a member of ISIS. [27] A Rolling Stone column by Miller seeking on background comments from reluctant Republican Trump supporters elicited a widely shared quote, "There are two options, you can be on this hell ship, or you can be in the water drowning". [26]

His memoir of working in pre-Trump era Republican politics, Why We Did It: A Travelogue From the Republican Road to Hell, was published by Harper in June 2022. [28] The book details Miller's political career, analysing the rise of Trump and the motivations of Republican politicians who remained firmly loyal to the MAGA movement, [29] [30] and reached #2 on The New York Times non fiction list in July 2022. [31] The book was positively received for its writing style and analysis of political changes within the post-Trump GOP during the late 2010s and early 2020s. [32] [33] In a review for The New York Times , Jennifer Szalai called the book "darkly funny" and praised Miller's insights into the inner workings of the Republican Party and the Washington D.C. political scene. [34] New York Times columnist David French wrote that it offered "painful" insights into the impact of partisanship and Trumpism on the American conservative Right. [31]

Books

Review

From any dark experience springs something hopeful and good. In the Trump years, that bright side has been Tim and his compatriots who took up arms to fight the MAGA scourge. Before this book, I understood why the crazies and kooks went along with Trump, but now I fully grasp why smart, supposedly ‘normal’ Republicans did, too. Tim’s observations are clear-eyed, wise, brutally honest, and darkly hilarious. Everyone should read this book, especially fellow Democrats who want to better understand our political foes. [35]

Personal life

Miller is openly gay, and in May 2018 married Tyler Jameson with whom he has an adopted daughter. [1] [36] He attributes his decision to take the risk of coming out in 2007, while still working on Republican campaigns, in part to the Larry Craig scandal. [9] In 2023, he relocated from Oakland, California to New Orleans, Louisiana with his husband and child. [21] [27]

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