GOP Congressman Deletes Tweet Comparing Vaccine Mandates to Holocaust After Facing Backlash

Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie posted a meme that suggested vaccine passports were similar to the identification tattoos forced upon concentration camp prisoners.

Rep. Massie
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Rep. Massie

A GOP lawmaker has deleted an ill-conceived tweet that compared COVID vaccine mandates to the Holocaust.

As pointed out by the Daily Beast, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky) removed the post Wednesday night, following widespread backlash. The post in question featured a meme that suggested vaccine passports were similar to the identification tattoos forced upon prisoners in concentration camps.

“If you have to carry a card on you to gain access to a restaurant, venue of an event in your country … that’s no longer a free country,” the post read.

Republican Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie deleted a tweet Wednesday night comparing vaccine mandates to the Holocaust. pic.twitter.com/QTSSH7eqpY

The post reportedly went up at around 3 p.m. and was removed by 11 that night. 

A number of political leaders and activists slammed the GOP representative for the post. 

“Once again, Massie has made a fool of himself on the national stage and embarrassed the commonwealth,” said Colmon Elridge, the chair of the Kentucky Democratic Party. “Denigrating the victims and survivors of the Holocaust just to score cheap political points is ignorant, shameful, and has no place in our politics or American society. Trying to quietly delete his tweet without apologizing for his ignorant and offensive behavior? That’s rock bottom pathetic.”

“Once again, @RepThomasMassie has made a fool of himself on the national stage...” — @KyDems chair @colmonelridge #KY04 pic.twitter.com/EWN1OvHNHk

Andrew Zirkle, who reportedly interned with Massie’s office, announced he had left the internship in light of the congressman’s offensive tweet. 

1/ I quit. I wanted to let everyone who knows me personally to know that as soon as I got in to work this morning, I resigned my position in the Office of Congressman Thomas Massie because of his tweet comparing the horrors of the Holocaust to vaccine passports. pic.twitter.com/YXSrPWW80e

On Thursday morning, Massie responded to the allegations that he was spreading anti-vaccine propaganda, claiming he was not against vaccines, but rather vaccine mandates and passports.

Like most of the people I represent, I’m not against the vaccine - I’m against unscientific and immoral vaccine mandates and vaccine passports.

“Vaccine choice” is not “anti-Vax” https://t.co/X9M8yCLKlB

— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) August 26, 2021

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