Albany Times Union

Devin Nunes needs to curb his lawsuit habit

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Just like everyone else, Rep. Devin Nunes, R-calif., has the right to sue anyone he believes has done him harm. But lately the Central Valley congressma­n has been exercising that right to settle what appear to be political scores.earlier this year, Nunes sued Twitter for enabling users to mock and criticize him during last year’s campaign; Mcclatchy, which owns the Fresno Bee, for publishing stories during the campaign about a controvers­ial yacht party associated with a winery he had invested in; three of his constituen­ts, for trying in vain to remove Nunes’ chosen identifier (“farmer”) from the 2018 ballot (he has since dropped that case); and Fusion GPS, the opposition research firm behind the socalled Steele dossier, for allegedly interferin­g with his work when he was chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee.

His latest legal challenge goes after writer Ryan Lizza and Hearst Magazines (owned by the same company as the Times Union) over an article that appeared in Esquire magazine a year ago. Lizza’s piece revealed that Nunes’ family quietly moved its dairy farm from California to (gasp!) Iowa. The lawsuit, which portrays several of Lizza’s analyses as “false statements,” asks for $75 million in compensati­on for the damage to Nunes’ reputation and all the pain and suffering this story supposedly caused him.

There’s a theme here. Nunes, who is President Trump’s No. 1 cheerleade­r in Congress, has taken a cue from his idol and is attacking people and organizati­ons he believes are trying to thwart his political ambitions. He won his re-election in 2018, but just barely.

Nunes’ asserting that his critics are partisans trying to stop him from uncovering Democratic Party corruption, as several of his lawsuits do, only makes them seem more like political documents. As the courts have said, political disputes are for the voters to resolve, not judges.

It is a fair bet that Nunes never intended to help his perceived antagonist­s with his legal attacks. Yet so far the main effect of the lawsuits has been to boost the profiles of his targets. For example, one of the Twitter parody accounts that so enraged Nunes, “Devin Nunes’ Cow,” had about 1,000 followers before his lawsuit. As of Friday afternoon, @Devincow now reaches 621,455 followers.

Way to fight back, Congressma­n. Best stop while you are ahead.

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