Yesterday
I discussed Russia, Syria, terrorism, and other issues on ABC’s This Week. You
can watch the interview by clicking on the picture below:
Monday, September 28, 2015
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Nunes on ABC's This Week
I will be appearing tomorrow on ABC’s Sunday morning news show This Week. The show airs from 9:00 am to 10:00 am PST in most Central Valley locations. For a full list of local air times, click here, scroll to the map of the United States at the bottom of the page, and click on your state.
Friday, September 18, 2015
Tickets available for Pope Francis appearance in DC
Pope Francis will be visiting Washington D.C. next Thursday, September 24, to give a speech to a Joint Session of Congress. My office has standing-room tickets for spectators to watch the address on jumbotrons on the West Lawn of the Capitol. After his speech, the Pope is expected to make an appearance on the Speaker’s Balcony, which looks out to the West Lawn. If you’re a constituent of my district and would like a ticket for the Pope’s appearance, please contact my D.C. office at (202) 225-2523. Tickets are limited and will be given out on a first come, first served basis.
Friday, September 4, 2015
Nunes office seeking interns
Fall
and spring internships are available in my Washington, D.C. and Visalia
offices. If you know someone who is interested in politics and public affairs,
wants to gain professional experience, and can excel in a fast-paced
environment, please pass along this message.
Interns
provide critical staff support and are often called on to work at public
events, conduct research, and help with special projects. The application
process is now open for both part-time and full-time applicants.
All
interns must have a high school diploma. Additionally, they must be enrolled in
or have recently graduated from an accredited college or university.
Applications can be downloaded from my website here.
For
answers to questions about my intern program, please call (559) 733-3861 or
(202) 225-2523.
Friday, August 28, 2015
#HetchHetchyHypocrites
A recent UC Davis study
projected the costs of the California water crisis this year. The researchers
found:
·
The net water shortage will be 2.5 million
acre-feet in 2015.
·
In response, farmers will fallow 542,000 acres
of land.
·
The crisis will cost the California economy
$2.74 billion this year, with the loss of 21,000 jobs.
The study finds
that California agriculture is faring better than many predicted. Some areas are suffering much more than others,
however. As the researchers previously noted,
“The impacts are concentrated mostly
in the San Joaquin Valley.”
For decades, elites in the Bay Area, which is a primary support base for many radical environmental groups, have successfully fought to divert huge amounts of Delta water from Central Valley families and communities to environmental causes. Meanwhile, the Bay Area’s own water supply is not subject to these diversions. San Francisco and other coastal communities enjoy an uninterrupted water supply piped in across the state from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir in Yosemite National Park. As Valley farmers fallow their dried up land, take a look at Hetch Hetchy – these photos were sent to my office by a Valley farmer who visited Yosemite last month:
It’s quite amazing how much water the Bay Area has kept for itself by exempting Hetch Hetchy from the punishing water regulations it has foisted on the Central Valley.
Let’s see if we can draw the Bay Area’s attention. If you
have pictures of Hetch Hetchy brimming with
water, please post them on your social media accounts with the hashtag
#HetchHetchyHypocrites.
Monday, August 17, 2015
Global warming overload
Since
its inception, the Obama administration has engaged in an all-out push to adopt
ever-stricter global warming regulations. Recall that Barack Obama was the only
presidential candidate – at least as far as I can remember – who took office
vowing to bankrupt
any company in an entire American industry that refuses to adhere to his
environmental agenda.
When President Obama’s attempt to impose
a carbon-trading scheme on the U.S. economy proved too
extreme even for a Democrat-controlled Congress to approve, the President
remarked that there’s more than one way to skin a cat. And since then, his
administration has passed crushing global warming regulations through
unilateral, administrative means. Despite the extensive list of taxpayer
subsidized green energy disasters – Solyndra, Fisker
Automotive, Beacon Power, A123 Systems Inc, EnerDel, to name a few – the
administration’s green policies march ever forward.
The
latest salvo is the president’s new “climate
action plan,” which mandates drastic reductions in carbon emissions from
power plants over the next few decades. The plan provoked a thoughtful Wall
Street Journal article
discussing the administration’s claim that these regulations will not result in
higher electricity prices that hurt the poor. That argument, the Journal
noted, is refuted by the plan itself, which demands that states launch
redistribution schemes to lessen the regulations’ impact on poor communities.
The
climate plan also led to observations
that despite the massive harm it will do to the economy, it will barely have
any effect at all on global warming – the problem it ostensibly aims to
address. However, the plan did have at least one immediate effect – an array of
business groups and states is vowing to sue
the government to stop these punitive regulations.
To
drum up support for these economically destructive policies, global warmists
resort to apocalyptic rhetoric, with President Obama claiming there is “no
greater threat to our planet.” As Chairman of the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, I
have to, respectfully, disagree.
Separately,
the Nunes Digest is updated here.
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