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Fauci hits back at GOP criticism over emails: 'It's all nonsense'

White House chief medical adviser Anthony FauciAnthony FauciChris Wallace: Backlash over Fauci emails ‘highly political’ Overnight Health Care: Biden ‘very confident’ in Fauci amid conservative attacks | House Dems press Biden on global vaccinations | CDC director urges parents to vaccinate adolescents The biggest revelations from Fauci’s inbox MORE late Friday pushed back on fresh criticism from Republicans following the release of thousands of his emails this week, calling the backlash “inappropriate” and “misleading.”

“It’s really very much an attack on science,” Fauci said during an interview on MSNBC’s “The Rachel MaddowRachel Anne MaddowSchumer works to balance a divided caucus’s demands Matt Taibbi: Rachel Maddow has become the new Bill O’Reilly Ocasio-Cortez eyeing T over 10 years for infrastructure MORE Show” when asked about the latest attacks targeting him.

“I mean, it is what it is. I’m a public figure, I’m going to take the arrows and the slings, but they’re just — they’re fabricated, and that’s just what it is,” added Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

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“My job was to make a vaccine and use my institute and these talented scientists that we have there and that we fund in the various universities to get a vaccine that was highly safe and highly effective,” he continued.

“We succeeded,” he said. “All the other stuff is just a terrible, not happy type of distraction. But it’s all nonsense.”

Fauci has long faced scrutiny from Republicans over his evolved guidance on masking and other issues amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with the latest criticism centering on his approach to the theory that the virus may have originated in a lab.

Emails between Fauci and others obtained this week by news outlets through public records requests show correspondence from early on in the pandemic raising the possibility that the virus came from a lab. Fauci had cast doubt on the theory publicly, though the emails do not show the scientist outright rejecting the prospect.

“I still believe the most likely origin is from an animal species to a human, but I keep an absolutely open mind that if there may be other origins of that, there may be another reason, it could have been a lab leak,” Fauci told CNN on Thursday.

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President BidenJoe BidenBipartisan lawmakers press Biden to ‘immediately’ evacuate Afghans who helped US forces Chris Wallace: Backlash over Fauci emails ‘highly political’ Democrats claim vindication, GOP cries witch hunt as McGahn finally testifies MORE said Friday that he remains “very confident in Dr. Fauci” and White House press secretary Jen PsakiJen PsakiOn The Money: Key takeaways from May jobs report | Biden rejects new GOP infrastructure offer as talks drag on Biden rejects new GOP offer as spending talks drag on OVERNIGHT ENERGY: Biden administration moves to reverse Trump endangered species rollbacks | Putin says Nord Stream 2 pipeline nearing completion | Climate a sticking point after Biden-Capito infrastructure talk MORE called the medical adviser an “undeniable asset” amid new criticism from Republicans including Sen. Josh HawleyJoshua (Josh) David HawleyBiden ‘very confident’ in Fauci amid conservative attacks Stanford reverses, allows student who mocked Federalist Society to graduate UNC and right-wing cancel culture MORE (Mo.), a top ally of former President TrumpDonald TrumpChris Wallace: Backlash over Fauci emails ‘highly political’ ‘So interesting’: Trump pitched on idea to run for House, become Speaker Erik Prince involved in push for experimental COVID-19 vaccine: report MORE who called for Fauci to resign on Friday.

The backlash from Republicans comes as the U.S. intelligence community probes whether the virus came from animal-to-human transmission or through a lab accident in Wuhan, China, with Biden ordering a report laying out the evidence.

Fauci said in the MSNBC interview that identifying the origin of COVID-19 is important to prevent another widespread outbreak.

“It is important to understand that. But it is being approached now in a very vehement way, in a very distorted way I believe, by attacking me,” Fauci told Maddow, who has defended him on the program.

“The question is extremely legitimate,” Fauci continued. “But what’s happened in the middle of all that, I’ve become the object of extraordinary, I believe completely inappropriate, distorted, misleading and misrepresented attacks.”

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“It’s unfortunate,” he added.

Fauci, who has appeared repeatedly on Maddow’s show during the pandemic, appeared again on the program Friday night after the host praised him to open the segment, calling him a “devoted researcher and scientist.”

“People attacking him now appear to be mad at him for the fact that there’s an epidemic at all,” she declared.