Some Democrats say “nyet” to their party leaders’ Russia obsession.

“I did a 22-county tour,” Rep. Tim Walz of Minnesota told The Hill Saturday. “Nobody’s focusing on that.”

“We should stay away from just piling on the criticism of Trump,” complained Rep. Peter Welch of Vermont.

In the wake of the party’s failure to win a much-watched special election in Georgia on Tuesday, Democrats in all but deep-blue districts are voicing doubts about the relentless anti-Trump strategy that the party has followed since his inauguration.

“People back in Ohio aren’t really talking that much about Russia,” Rep. Tim Ryan told MSNBC on Thursday.

“If we don’t talk more about their interest than we do about how we’re so angry with Donald Trump and everything that’s going on, then we’re never going to be able to win elections.”

In a Harvard-Harris poll conducted for The Hill last week, 64 percent of registered voters said the investigations into President Trump and Russia are hurting the country, and 56 percent want Congress to move on to other issues.