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Trump worries Hunter, Issa

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Two of Donald Trump’s most high-profile supporters in Congress have a case of buyer’s remorse.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Vista, said he’d like to “re-do” the entire primary process where Trump wasn’t a candidate. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Alpine, one of the first members of the House to back Trump, warned of an attempt to block Trump as the Republican Party’s presidential nominee and potential violence at the GOP national convention in July.

Issa blamed President Barack Obama, in part, for the Trump phenomenon.

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“Donald Trump got this job because this president has been so polarizing,” Issa said Monday at the San Diego Regional Chamber annual congressional luncheon. “Now that’s not a good reason for the voters to have passed-over experienced governors and senators — candidates who in another climate likely would have been thought of much more on what they said they were going to do and their resumes.”

Neither Trump nor Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders should have done as well as they did in the primaries, but frustration with the Obama administration fueled their candidacies, Issa said.

“It’s a socialist versus an egotist. Neither one of them were particularly people who should have been so far up,” he said.

Later, he added, that the presumptive Democratic nominee, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, also fails her party’s voters because of the investigation of her use of a private email server while leading the State Department.

“This is a very unusual year. I would love to re-do the deck and start over and see who we would pick if we say ‘you can have those, you have to pick someone experienced,’” said Issa, who initially backed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio for the GOP presidential nomination.

Hunter, despite being a Trump delegate, reiterated that he won’t go to his party’s convention in Cleveland next month.

“I think it’s going to be mayhem and riots and hooligans and thugs and police forces. And that’s just the actual convention,” Hunter said at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront.

He said he expects there to be some sort of political battle to change procedures or rules to block Trump’s path to the nomination.

“I think it’s going to be a madhouse, really,” he said.

Hunter and Rep. Chris Collins, R-New York, were the first two representatives to endorse Trump and subsequently became the candidate’s intermediaries to the House in an attempt to build rapport and support with members. Last week, the Washington Post reported that Hunter said he didn’t always agree with Trump and couldn’t explain some of Trump’s conflicting policy stances.

“Yeah, it’s not my job to answer for Donald Trump,” Hunter said as he spoke with a gaggle of reporters in Washington. “Really. I’m not even a surrogate. I’m just an endorser.”

Rep. Susan Davis, D-San Diego, said the political climate during the primary election and caucuses indicate that people are not satisfied with how Washington works.

“What we really want is a president who can help make government function again,” said Davis, a Clinton supporter.

Both Davis and Rep. Scott Peters, D-San Diego, said they expect Clinton to be elected president.

“Whoever the president is -- I guess the betting money is on Secretary Clinton -- I hope they take the opportunity to recognize that people are frustrated with a D.C. that is not working together,” said Peters, who also backs Clinton.

Neither Hunter nor Issa made any sort of statement at the luncheon indicating that they believe Trump will win November’s election.

Rep. Juan Vargas, D-San Diego, the fifth member of the county’s house delegation, was not at the event.

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