
Donald Trump's White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller got a "direct" message from seven of nine Supreme Court justices, a former federal prosecutor said Saturday.
Ex-prosecutor Glenn Kirschner over the weekend published a video entitled, "The Supreme Court AGAIN Tells Trump NO UNCONSTITUTIONAL DEPORTATIONS Of Venezuelan Immigrants," in which the legal analyst highlighted a pattern in which at least seven Supreme Court justices have been standing up to the president.
Kirschner zeroed in on the most recent example, which saw seven of nine justices ruling that immigrants are entitled to due process.
EXCLUSIVE: Breastfeeding mom of US citizen sues Kristi Noem after being grabbed by ICE
According to Kirschner, that particular point was one of the most direct in the entire judicial ruling.
The passage of the opinion, he says, "sounds like it might be a direct rebuke, refutation of Stephen Miller's assertion that due process doesn't really apply to immigrants, particularly immigrants that may be here without status."
After quoting Miller saying due process isn't to protect "an illegal alien," Kirschner flags "one of the most direct assertions" in the seven-justice opinion.
"The Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law," the justices wrote. That led Kirschner to conclude, "That sure feels like the Supreme Court directly communicating 'F--- you, Stephen Miller."
"Let's take our wins where we can find them," he added.