Pro-Trump activists who attended White House super-spreader event have launched 40-stop tour across America in bright pink bus to promote Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett
Conservative activists have launched a cross-country bus tour in support of Amy Coney Barrett, who has been nominated by President Donald Trump to the US Supreme Court.
Penny Nance and Jenny Beth Martin, of Concerned Women for America, attended the nomination announcement in the White House Rose Garden on September 26, which ended up being a coronavirus super-spreader event.
Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advise quarantining at home for 14 days to monitor any symptoms.
Instead, the women are traveling in a bright pink 'Women for Amy' bus and will make 40 stops in 12 swing states, including a prayer event on Capitol Hill.
Some members, including the group's president and CEO (left, attended an event at the White House now deemed a super-spreader event. Pictured: CWA CEO Nance (left, on right) with Jenna Ellis, Senior Legal Adviser to the Trump campaign (left, on left); and group leader Jenny Beth Martin (right, on left) at the White House during the nomination announcement
Concerned Women for America has launched a cross-country tour in support of President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. They'll make 40 stops in 13 states
The group is traveling in a pink 'Women for Amy' bus and will make 40 stops in 12 swing states, including a prayer event on Capitol Hill
States on the tour include Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arizona
'2020 is the year of conservative women where we see the first constitutionalist conservative woman nominated to the Supreme Court,' Nance, CEO and President of Concerned Women for America, said in a statement.
'I am looking forward to meeting with and educating conservative women across the country showing our support for Amy Coney Barrett and affirming that she is indeed the right one to be confirmed to the highest court in the land.'
The bus tour kicked off on October 7 near Atlanta, Georgia, with Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) in attendance.
Loeffler, who was also at the White House event, said she tested negative for the virus, but was seen during the bus tour without a mask.
Photos from stops in Spartanburg, South Carolina and Raleigh, North Carolina, also featured those in attendance in few masks and little social distancing.
The group has refused to say what COVID-19 protocols , such as masks and social distancing, are in place. Pictured: Members from Concerned Women for America pose at the event announcing the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court
In a video message , Nance, the CEO, said that the tour was partially to counter the ''attacks' on Barrett's faith
Additional stops are scheduled in Virginia, the District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arizona.
It is unclear if most of the women on the tour have been tested for COVID-19, which has killed more than 212,000 Americans.
Nance tweeted on Friday that she tested negative before she left for the tour and has not shown any symptoms of infection.
Concerned Women for America did not immediately reply to DailyMail.com's request for comment on whether or not any COVID-19 protocols are in place.
This is not the first time the group has launched such a tour.
In 2018, the women traveled around the country after Brett Kavanaugh was nominated. He was eventually confirmed to the Supreme Court by a slim majority.
'If we learned anything from the confirmation process of Brett Kavanaugh, it's that the left will stoop to anything,' Nance said in a video message.
'The attacks on her faith, the anti-Christian bigotry isn't just attacks against her. It's an attack on you. That's why Concerned Women for America is going to hit the road.'
It is not clear how the tour is being funded.
However, in the past, the organization received donations from the the Judicial Crisis Network, which allegedly paid $12 million for ads supporting Kavanaugh, reported The Intercept.
Nance's now support of Trump is a turnaround from her views in 2016, during which she signed a letter asking those voting in the Iowa caucus to 'support anyone but Donald Trump,' according to The Washington Post.
'He has impugned the dignity of women...and has through the years made disparaging public comments to and about many women,' the letter read.
STOPS ON THE BUS TOUR BACKING AMY CONEY BARRETT
1. Marietta, Georgia
2. Spartanburg, South Carolina
3. Gastonia, North Carolina
4. Charlotte, North Carolina
5. Raleigh, North Carolina
6. Lynchburg, Virginia
7. Richmond, Virginia
8. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
9. Williamsport, Pennsylvania
10. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania
11. York, Pennsylvania
12. Lancaster, Pennsylvania
13. Akron, Ohio
14. South Bend, Indiana
15. Davenport, Iowa
16. Des Moines, Iowa
17. St. Joseph, Missouri
18. Kansas City, Missouri
19. Kansas City, Kansas
20. Springfield, Missouri
21. Ft. Worth, Texas
22. Dallas, Texas
23. Rockwall, Texas
24. Tyler, Texas
25. Longview, Texas
26. College Station, Texas
27. Huntsville, Texas
28. Sugarland, Texas
29. Houston, Texas
30. Austin, Texas
31. El Paso, Texas
32. Tucson, Arizona
33. Phoenix, Arizona
*Remaining stops to be confirmed
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