About a week ago, NBC News reported that the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Robert Redfield, agreed when questioned at a congressional hearing that it’s “absolutely wrong and inappropriate” to use labels such as “Wuhan virus” or “Chinese coronavirus” when discussing the viral outbreak.
For many conservatives, the guidance was easily ignored. Many on the far-right, including on Capitol Hill, have made aggressive rhetorical efforts in recent weeks to change the nomenclature, apparently in the hopes of shifting public blame toward Beijing.
Evidently, they’ve persuaded Donald Trump.
President Donald Trump drew backlash Monday night after posting a tweet using the phrase “Chinese Virus.” … Chinese officials condemned Trump’s comments, saying his tweet smeared China. “The U.S. should first take care of its own matters,” said Geng Shuang, a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry.
Eight weeks after the United States uncovered its first confirmed coronavirus case, Trump hadn’t used the phrase “Chinese Virus” at all — in social media or in public. Late yesterday, however, the American president published a tweet with the phrase, and the Republican used it again this morning.
The xenophobic rebranding isn’t exactly subtle. What’s more, it comes a week after Trump’s widely panned Oval Office address in which he went out of his way to label COVID-19 a “foreign virus.” In literally his first sentence, Trump emphasized that the outbreak “started in China.”









