Los Angeles Times

Rep. Nunes’ hometown cares little about memo

Businesses, residents and farmers around Tulare say they believe he can deliver jobs and water.

- By Jazmine Ulloa

TULARE, Calif. — At Old Salles Cafe, near the northern outskirts of this deeply conservati­ve farming city, Archie Harrison said he did not know much about his congressma­n, Devin Nunes, nor did he need to know more.

“If he supports Trump, I support him,” the 51-yearold truck driver said Monday over a breakfast of steak and eggs, only hours after President Trump had hailed Nunes in a tweet as a future “Great American Hero.”

As Nunes finds himself at the center of a political fire- storm in Washington over the release of his controvers­ial memo about the Russia investigat­ion, thousands of dollars are pouring into Democratic campaigns aiming to unseat him in the midterm election. But in the Republican’s hometown of Tulare, where partisan rifts reflect those across the country, many constituen­ts aren’t following the battle, even as it seems to heat up.

Here some business owners and workers said they still believe Nunes can deliver on jobs. Farmers and growers tend to know him for water, not Russia.

“It’s fake — the whole Russia deal,” said John Cairns, a fifth-generation farmer who attended Cal Poly San Luis Obispo with Nunes and was in his fraternity. “Washington is a totally different ballgame from what we are dealing with out here. We are going to sup-

port a candidate that delivers water to local farmers.”

Nunes’ district sits in the San Joaquin Valley, spanning Tulare, Visalia and parts of Fresno. It is predominan­tly Latino, although less than 29% of that population is registered to vote, and agricultur­e is a major economic driver and No. 1 employer. In Tulare, a city of nearly 63,000, farmers like to point out that the region feeds the world, with Tulare, Fresno and Kern counties typically running among the top three global agricultur­al producers for cotton, almonds, wine grapes and walnuts.

The district is home to nearly half a million cows, and 50% of the world’s supply of raisins is produced within a 60-mile radius of Fresno.

Growers see Nunes, whose family has been farming in the community for generation­s, as a longtime vocal advocate for their interests. They say his prior legislatio­n failed only because of previous presidents.

Roger Isom, president of the California Cotton Ginners and Growers Assn., said Nunes in his 14 years in Congress has helped bring attention to the water crisis. They cited in particular East Portervill­e, an unincorpor­ated area of Tulare County, where hundreds of wells went dry and people were forced to flush toilets with buckets of dirty water during the recent years-long drought. The congressma­n’s efforts led to the building of a communal shower and to the temporary opening of dams to allow water to flow to the area.

“Devin fought to bring this to the light,” Isom said. “He has pushed the conversati­on, and there is the impact in my community.”

Now Isom and other growers are hoping Nunes helps push for more deregulati­on of the farming industry, funds for research and the creation of more dams, which they say requires state and federal dollars.

They also want to see federal restrictio­ns repealed protecting smelt, an endangered fish species not indigenous to the Central Valley. And they are well aware that they are at odds with the rest of California, or as one grower put it, “people on the other side of the grapevine.”

“You go to San Francisco, and people think we are trying to kill the environmen­t,” Cairns said at his corner produce store off All American City Highway. “But we are just trying to make a living and put food on tables.”

That is why their faith in Nunes endures, they say, though some agree his latest political battles in Washington are a distractio­n from the issues germane to their daily lives.

“Our eyes are on the more important issue right now: a federal project that gets us water,” Isom said. “Am I going to keep up with everything [the president] tweets? I honestly don’t have the time.”

Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, became a focus for Democrats after he crafted and released a four-page memo last week that alleges senior FBI and Justice Department officials relied on questionab­le and politicall­y motivated sources to justify surveillan­ce of Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. Democrats counter that Nunes cherry-picked informatio­n, and on Monday they won the committee’s approval to release their rebuttal memo.

In neighborin­g Fresno, several dozen people took to the streets Saturday to protest the release of Nunes’ document, and the opinion pages of the local newspaper, the Fresno Bee, recently dubbed him “President Trump’s stooge.” The Bee covered the memo spat on its front page Tuesday.

Former county prosecutor Andrew Janz, a Democrat, is running an uphill battle for Nunes’ House seat in a district where registered Republican voters outnumber Democrats by 10 percentage points and Trump won with 51% of the vote in 2016. Late last year, Janz bought a highway billboard in Clovis depicting Nunes and Trump clad in diapers, with Russian President Vladimir Putin pulling them by leashes.

Over the weekend, Janz, 33, said on HBO’s “Vice News Tonight” that the billboard shows he is “not afraid to attack an eight-term incumbent.”

The Democrat said he raised $100,000 for his campaign the day the memo was unveiled, $150,000 the next and was on track to do the same Sunday. “By end of this quarter, we should probably have $1 million in our bank account,” he said in a segment that played in a hotel in Tulare.

It’s unclear how influentia­l a liberal national news show might be in the 22nd Congressio­nal District. Residents do listen to conservati­ve talk radio, whose hosts on this particular day spent less time discussing news in Washington than they did on perceived liberal media bias and how kneeling NFL players might be the reason that Super Bowl ratings declined.

In this quiet town, which some in the area see as a world apart even from the more populated Fresno, how residents felt about Trump tended to dictate how they felt about Nunes — and many preferred to avoid the toxic subject altogether.

One downtown restaurant owner said he has noticed a deep partisan divide among his clients, though residents with varying political views complain it is difficult to get to know Nunes, who they said has not hosted a town hall.

Others wondered why he had not done more to help the so-called Dreamers brought to the country illegally as children.

“I thought he was going to do what he advertised,” said Gilda Salas, 53, a housekeepe­r who voted for him last election. “I thought he was going to worry about education and illegal immigratio­n.”

At Flores Nidia on South K Street, Maria Ortega had arranged rows and rows of stuffed white bears and red balloons for Valentine’s Day. Ortega, 67, said Nunes should be worried about aligning himself with someone like Trump, whose immigratio­n rhetoric she said is scaring off employees and clients alike and hurting small businesses.

“A good politician is well known to everyone in their hometown, but I know very little else about him,” she said.

‘Am I going to keep up with everything [the president] tweets? I honestly don’t have the time.’ — Roger Isom, president, California Cotton Ginners and Growers Assn.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? REP. DEVIN NUNES, right, is at the center of a firestorm in Washington over a classified memo.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images REP. DEVIN NUNES, right, is at the center of a firestorm in Washington over a classified memo.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? DAIRY COWS at Tulare High School Farm last year. Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) is from a farming family and has strong backing from farmers and growers.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times DAIRY COWS at Tulare High School Farm last year. Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) is from a farming family and has strong backing from farmers and growers.

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