Miller's husband, George Schaefer, became heavily involved in Norfolk Republican politics, serving as local party chair and making unsuccessful bids to unseat 86th district Delegate
George Heilig in 1993 and 1995. Due to her TV news job, Miller's role in Schaefer's campaigns was severely limited. Schaefer switched political allegiances at the turn of the millennium and was elected Norfolk
Clerk of Circuit Court as a Democrat in 2003. Now out of TV news, Miller was able to take an active role in his campaign. Delegate
Thelma Drake, a Republican, was elected to the
United States House of Representatives in November 2004, creating a vacancy in the 87th district, where Miller's house was then located. She decided to run and was unopposed for the Democratic nomination. In the
special election on December 14, she narrowly defeated Michael Ball, the local Republican chair and a professional
fundraiser for conservative
televangelist Pat Robertson's Regent University. Miller stressed the need for bipartisan solutions to such issues as transportation and the environment, in the manner of Democratic
Governor Mark Warner; Ball emphasized his conservative credentials and his potential for delivering for the district as a member of the House majority. In 2005 she won reelection in a three-way race with Ball and
independent John Coggeshall, a local lawyer, cabaret entertainer and radio talk show host. In 2007 she defeated retired
Vice Admiral Henry C. "Hank" Giffin III, and in 2009 she defeated Republican John Amiral, a former Navy officer, to return for her third term in
Richmond. In 2011, Miller was
redistricted into House district 100 along with fellow Democrat
Lynwood Lewis. She did not run that year. The 87th district, which was moved to northern Virginia, was won by Republican
David Ramadan. Miller considered a run for
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia in 2013, but chose not to. Following
Ralph Northam's election as Lieutenant Governor, Miller announced she would run to be the Democratic nominee in the
special election for Northam's seat in the
Virginia Senate. ==Notes==