❓WHAT HAPPENED: A former Duke University professor claims that, in 2003, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller was a student of his and accurately predicted that he would be the number two staffer in the White House and that the President would be Donald J. Trump in the next 15 years.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Stephen Miller, Professor H. E. (Hein) Goemans, and President Trump.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The interview surfaced on social media on Wednesday, January 14, 2026.
💬KEY QUOTE: “I asked him in 2003 what he wanted to be when he grew up, and he said, ‘I want to be number two in the White House.’ And I said, ‘Oh, when do you want to achieve that?’ He says, ‘In the next fifteen years.'” — Prof. Goemans
🎯IMPACT: The fact that Miller is the number two White House staffer and that the President is Donald Trump proves incredible prescience.
A former Duke University professor claims that, in 2003, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller was a student of his and accurately predicted that he would be the number two staffer in the White House and that the president would be Donald J. Trump in the next 15 years.
“I asked him in 2003 what he wanted to be when he grew up,” Professor H. E. (Hein) Goemans—who now teaches at the University of Rochester—said in a recent radio interview, continuing, “And he said, ‘I want to be number two in the White House.’ And I said, ‘Oh, when do you want to achieve that?’ He says, ‘In the next fifteen years.'”
“I said, ‘Wow, okay, but who would be the president?’ In 2003. And he said, ‘Donald Trump, maybe,'” Prof. Goemans stated, to the astonishment of the host. The professor added, “The guy is very smart,” while noting the conversation took place “at Duke, in PoliSci 122.”
🔮 @StephenM pic.twitter.com/KPkXx7GN7s
— ALX 🇺🇸 (@alx) January 14, 2026
Shortly after President Trump’s landslide 2024 election victory, Miller was named White House Deputy Chief of Staff, subordinate only to Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. In this role, Miller oversees a significant portion of U.S. public policy—especially the administration’s enforcement of federal immigration laws and certain national security issues.
He also served as U.S. Homeland Security Advisor.
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