In 2018, Miller was one of several Trump administration officials scrutinized for their inexperience and lack of qualifications.[7] Miller's LinkedIn page falsely claimed that he was a Marine recruiter and that he had graduated from college in 2011 rather than in 2013.[7][2] After The Washington Post raised questions about his biography, Miller removed the claims and called them mistakes made by a relative, who he said made the LinkedIn page on his behalf.[7][2]
Miller was appointed to the Holocaust Memorial Council by President Trump in December 2020.[10]
In February 2021, Miller launched a campaign for Congress in the redrawn 7th district. The district overlapped with what had previously been the 16th, represented by two-term Republican Anthony Gonzalez. Miller was initially set to face Gonzalez in the Republican primary, but Gonzalez announced in September 2021 that he would not seek reelection to a third term, denouncing Trump as a "cancer for the country" and citing the likelihood of a "brutally hard primary" against Miller, family considerations, and a wave of threats against him.[14][15] Miller ran after Gonzalez voted to impeach Trump for incitement of insurrection, arising from the January 6 United States Capitol attack.[16][17] Miller moved back to Ohio, purchasing a home in Rocky River, in order to challenge Gonzalez.[18]
In June 2021, in his first rally since the January 6 attack, Trump appeared in Wellington, Ohio, with Miller; he praised Miller in a 90-minute rally in which he addressed many topics, including his falsehoods about the 2020 election.[19]
Miller won the May 3 Republican primary for Ohio's 7th congressional district with 71.8% of the vote.[20]
As of 2024, Miller and David Kustoff are the only Jewish members of the Republican Party in Congress.[26]
Miller was elected by other incoming Republicans to represent them on the steering committee, which determines what committees members sit on.[27]
On January 31, 2023, Miller introduced a resolution to remove Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee. The resolution passed two days later.[28]
On November 30, 2023, Miller sent a letter to his congressional colleagues supporting the expulsion of George Santos, alleging that Santos defrauded him and his mother by making charges to their personal credit cards without approval "for [campaign] contribution amounts that exceeded FEC limits." Miller said that this situation had cost him "tens of thousands of dollars" in legal fees.[29] Miller brought these accusations directly to Santos in House session, calling him a "crook"; in response Santos accused Miller of hypocrisy and domestic violence.[30]
After the October 7, 2023, attack by Hamas in southern Israel, Miller criticized Rashida Tlaib for displaying a Palestinian flag outside her office, saying: "I don't even want to call it the Palestinian flag because they're not a state, they're a territory, that's about to probably get eviscerated and go away here shortly, as we're going to turn that into a parking lot."[31][32] Miller further stated there should be no "rules of engagement" in the Israeli assault on Gaza.[33]
In January 2024, Miller was appointed to the Commission on Reform and Modernization of the Department of State.[34][35]
Miller dated Trump White House aide Stephanie Grisham from 2019 to 2020.[2] In October 2021, Grisham said that Miller had "been physically abusive" to her, "cheated" on her, and "lied" to her. Miller filed a defamation lawsuit against her.[38] He voluntarily dismissed the case with prejudice in August 2023.[39]
Miller became engaged in 2021 to Emily Moreno, daughter of Bernie Moreno.[2] They married in August 2022 at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey. The couple has a daughter who was born in November 2023. In August 2024, on the couple's second wedding anniversary, Miller filed for divorce.[40][41]
Legal issues
Miller pleaded no contest to two misdemeanor charges in 2007 after being charged with assault, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest; the charges were later dismissed as part of a diversion program.[7]
In 2009, he was charged with underage drinking; after he pleaded no contest, that charge was dismissed under a first-time offenders' program.[7][2]
In 2010, Miller pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct stemming from a late-night physical altercation in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.[7][2]
In 2011, he was charged with "operating a vehicle without reasonable control" and operating a vehicle impaired (OVI) after crashing his Jeep Grand Cherokee, and told officers that he had had "two to three beers and several shots" the night before and "woke up in urine-soaked pants".[2] Miller pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and failure to control.[2] In 2018 and 2021, he called the events "youthful mistakes".[7]