Lee Haywood got the COVID-19 vaccine. Heās seen friends lose their lives to the virus, and watched others struggle to recover. A smoker for 37 years, he believes the medical evidence showing that the vaccine sharply reduces his chances of a severe infection.
Yet on the frigid afternoon of Jan. 23, Haywood, a 61-year-old Republican running for a North Carolina congressional seat, was near the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, standing among signs that read āVaccines killā and āStop the Vaccine Holocaust.ā He had helped organize a bus carrying 35 people from Greensboro to the capital.
āIām against the forced vaccinations or forced wearing of these masks by these bureaucrats deep in the bowels of the government,ā Haywood says. āThis country was founded on liberty, and these mandates just slap everybody in the face.ā
Haywoodās presence at the āDefeat the Mandatesā rally was a window into a growing political cause that is beginning to unite a host of groups across the right. TheĀ anti-vaccine movement, once a fringe cohort, has repositioned itself as an opposition to mandates and government overreach. The distinction has attracted legions of supporters by tapping into the anger, exhaustion, grief and frustration of millions of Americans as the pandemic enters its third year.
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