Imperial Valley Press

Nunes heading Russia inquiry avoids angry protesters

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FRESNO (AP) — A California congressma­n under fire for his handling of an investigat­ion into Russian meddling of the 2016 presidenti­al election avoided a crowd of angry protesters in a Friday visit to his home state.

Republican Rep. Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, was ushered in and out of an event in Fresno, where he spoke at a private gathering of the Ag Lenders Society. Organizers declined to allow reporters inside.

Attendees said Nunes faced a supportive crowd inside, while outside on a busy street, roughly 300 protesters shouted, some waving signs linking Nunes to President Donald Trump and Russia.

“Congressma­n Nunes, we need a guard dog not a lap dog,” one sign read, next to a protester holding another: “Get out of bed with Trump.” A man shouted through a megaphone: “Come out and play, Nunes, you coward.”

Nunes is facing criticism for going to Trump after a secret intelligen­ce briefing before reporting his findings to his committee. Nunes, who was a member of the presidenti­al transition team, has resisted calls to step aside from his committee’s investigat­ion into contacts between Trump campaign officials and Russians.

Nunes, however, shows no signs of giving up his leadership role.

“At the end of the day, this is a tough job, and there’s tough work that has be done,” Nunes told CBS47-TV in Fresno in a Friday interview. “I think there’s nobody better than me right now to be doing it.”

He also said that he answers to nobody but voters, and the issue he briefed Trump on had nothing to do with Russia.

Not everybody is convinced.

“We need people to investigat­e who actually have an interest in an independen­t investigat­ion,” said protester Annaliese Herms, a 23-year-old office worker from Fresno. She called Russian interferen­ce a “breach of the democratic process” and called Nunes’ integrity into question.

Guests leaving the event said the Russia investigat­ion came up at least once during Nunes’ talk, which focused mostly on water, a key issue in the farming region in California, the nation’s leading agricultur­al state.

Leaving the luncheon, Joseph Butterweck said after listening to Nunes and following news accounts, he believes the congressma­n and Trump did nothing wrong.

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