Katie Miller, wife of Trump adviser Stephen Miller, has launched a podcast aimed at conservative women, particularly mothers, pitching it as a space for 'a mom like me' to talk lifestyle, family and politics. Despite Miller’s access to high-profile Republicans and her former boss Elon Musk, early reaction from critics and limited audience metrics suggest the show has yet to break through in the saturated MAGA media ecosystem.
Katie Miller, who married Stephen Miller in 2020, introduced "The Katie Miller Podcast" in August 2025 after leaving a role advising Elon Musk at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and in the private sector.
In her launch video on X, Miller framed the show as content for busy conservative mothers. She said there "isn't a place for conservative women to gather online" and "there isn't a place for a mom like me, mom of three young kids — 4, 3 and almost 2 — and a wife, and trying to do a career, eat healthy, work out," according to interviews and coverage in outlets including Axios, Fox News and The Independent.
The podcast is part of a broader effort by Republicans and pro-Trump media strategists to reach women as voters and influencers inside their families. Reporting by the Guardian has described Miller’s show as an unofficial vehicle for a "family values" and pronatalist agenda aimed at conservative women, emphasizing motherhood, faith and skepticism of mainstream feminism rather than detailed policy debates.
Episodes feature casual, personality-driven conversations with prominent MAGA-aligned figures. Early guests, according to Miller’s own announcements and multiple news reports, include Vice President J.D. Vance, boxing champion Mike Tyson and former ESPN host Sage Steele. Coverage in The Washington Post and other outlets describes Miller’s interview style as centered on light questions about family routines, entertainment preferences and everyday life, rather than grilling guests on their records in office or business controversies.
Miller’s political trajectory helps explain the podcast’s positioning. Raised in Weston, Florida, and known then as Katie Waldman, she attended Cypress Bay High School before going on to the University of Florida. Separate profiles in national media have reported that she was deeply involved in student government and once faced criticism for her role in discarding hundreds of copies of the campus newspaper ahead of a student election. Those accounts portray her as intensely ambitious in campus politics and suggest that her hard-edged approach to partisan battles predates her time in Washington.
After college, Miller worked in Republican politics and then in the Trump administration, including at the Department of Homeland Security and later in the office of Vice President Mike Pence. She went on to serve in a senior role at DOGE and then worked closely with Musk when he left government, before deciding in mid-2025 to focus on building a media platform of her own.
Now, Miller presents herself foremost as a mother and advocate of traditional gender roles. In social media posts and interviews highlighted by outlets covering the podcast, she argues that modern culture has undervalued motherhood and that raising children is women’s "highest" calling. Her monologues and promotional materials frequently urge women to embrace having more children and to see domestic and family life as central sources of meaning.
Critics on the right and left have questioned whether Miller’s show offers enough distinctiveness or substance to attract a large and loyal audience. A review in the Guardian, summarized by media-watch sites, described "The Katie Miller Podcast" as lacking charisma and depth, faulting its "softball" questions and heavily staged tone. Analysts note that Miller is entering a conservative women’s media space already dominated by figures such as Megyn Kelly, Allie Beth Stuckey and Candace Owens.
Publicly available data on downloads and views are limited, and comprehensive listener numbers are not yet clear. However, coverage from several outlets notes that Miller’s launch video initially drew only a modest number of views, and critics argue that the show has so far struggled to generate the kind of viral clips and intense engagement that define more established MAGA-aligned podcasts.
Miller’s effort nonetheless fits into a wider Republican strategy ahead of upcoming elections: to package Trump-era priorities in a warmer, lifestyle-oriented format aimed at women. Whether a podcast built around gentle conversations with MAGA insiders can both broaden the movement’s appeal and satisfy core activists who prefer more combative ideological content remains an open question.