Gun-toting protesters against Michigan's coronavirus lockdown have rallied in the state capitol building.
Hundreds of demonstrators, a few of them armed, gathered in Lansing and many did not wear masks or socially distance.
Police checked their temperatures before some were allowed into the capitol, where lawmakers were debating.
Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, extended her stay-at-home mandate earlier this month until 15 May.
Michigan has been hard hit by the coronavirus, with 3,788 deaths.
More than 41,000 infections have been recorded across the Midwestern state, mostly in the Detroit metro area.
Thursday's protest, dubbed the "American Patriot Rally", was organised by Michigan United for Liberty. It called for state businesses to reopen on 1 May in violation of state orders.
It is legal to bear firearms inside the statehouse, and several demonstrators were openly carrying guns in the Senate gallery.
But some armed protesters reportedly tried to enter the floor of the chamber, and were blocked by state police and sergeants-at-arms.
One state senator said several of her colleagues wore bulletproof vests.
Footage of protesters outside the building showed them chanting "Let us in!", "Let us work" and "This is the people's house, you cannot lock us out".
"The virus is here," one demonstrator, Joni George, told the Associated Press. "It's going to be here… It's time to let people go back to work. That's all there is to it."
The rally is believed to have been the largest of its type since one on 15 April when Michigan protesters sat in their cars in order to create traffic around the statehouse.
President Donald Trump threw his support behind demonstrators at the time, tweeting "LIBERATE MICHIGAN". Some critics said his tweets were an attempt to foment insurrection.
On Thursday, the Republican-controlled legislature refused Governor Whitmer's request to extend her emergency orders.
They also cleared the way for her to be sued over her handling of the pandemic. She hit back that she does not need legislative authorisation for the extension.
On Wednesday, the governor accused Republicans of treating the virus like a "political problem", rather than "a public health crisis".