U.S. truckers plan pandemic protest, inspired by Canadian counterparts
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[February 23, 2022]
By Omar Younis
ADELANTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Taking a cue
from demonstrations that paralyzed Canada's capital city for weeks, U.S.
truckers on Wednesday plan to embark on a 2,500-mile (4,000-km)
cross-country drive towards Washington to protest coronavirus
restrictions.
Organizers of the 'People's Convoy' say they want to "jumpstart the
economy" and reopen the country. Their 11-day trek will approach the
Beltway around the U.S. capital on March 5 "but will not be going into
D.C. proper," according to a statement.
The Pentagon on Tuesday said it had approved 400 D.C. National Guard
troops to "provide support at designated traffic posts, provide command
and control, and cover sustainment requirements" from Feb. 26 through
March 7.
About 50 large tactical vehicles were also approved to be placed at
traffic posts.
Brian Brase, a truck driver who is one of the organizers, said
regardless of where the trucks stop "we're not going anywhere" until the
group's demands are met. Those demands include an end to vaccine and
mask requirements.
In Canada, pandemic-related protests choked streets in the capital
Ottawa for more than three weeks and blocked the busiest land crossing
between Canada and the United States - the Ambassador Bridge connecting
Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario - for six days.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked rarely used emergency powers to
end the protests, and Canadian police restored a sense of normalcy in
Ottawa over the weekend.
"We plan to stay a while and hope they don't escalate it the way Trudeau
did with his disgusting government overreach," Brase said from Adelanto,
California, where the convoy will begin, about 80 miles (130 km)
northeast of Los Angeles.
Brase said he expected thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, would
participate.
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Truckers and their supporters start to gather before a convoy leaves
the following morning bound for the nation's capital to protest
against coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine mandates, in
Adelanto, California, U.S., February 22, 2022. REUTERS/David Swanson
Organizers bill the convoy as
nonpartisan, trucker-led, and supported by a wide range of ethnic
minorities and religious faiths.
Economic growth in the United States - as in other countries - was
brought to a juddering halt by the imposition of lockdowns to
control the spread of the coronavirus. The economy has boomed since
the government pumped in trillions in relief - it grew 5.7% in 2021,
the strongest since 1984, the Commerce Department reported in
January.
Meanwhile, unemployment stands at 4%, close to the 3.5% rate of
February 2020, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But
headwinds related to strained supply chains and inflation remain.
"It is now time to reopen the country," the protest organizers said
in a statement.
Most states are already easing restrictions. In California, where
the convoy begins, universal mask requirements were lifted last week
and masks for vaccinated people are required only in high-risk areas
such as public transit, schools and healthcare settings.
But the protesters want an immediate end to the two-year-old state
of emergency, which Governor Gavin Newsom has extended.
Nationwide, new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations due to the
coronavirus have plummeted from all-time highs hit a month ago, but
nearly 2,000 people per day are still dying and the number of total
deaths is closing in on 1 million since the pandemic began.
(Reporting by Omar Youis in Adelanto; Additional reporting and
writing by Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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