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Home»Policies»Why Trump got visibly angry at the ‘TACO’ question
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Why Trump got visibly angry at the ‘TACO’ question

Robert JonesBy Robert JonesMay 31, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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CNN
 — 

There was a reason for President Donald Trump’s particularly scathing response when a reporter asked him Wednesday about a new term coined about the president’s tariffs: TACO, or Trump Always Chickens Out.

He had not yet heard the term, according to a senior White House official who acknowledged to CNN that the president was caught off guard. Trump had said as much at the time, saying “I’ve never heard that” before calling it the “nastiest question.”

“He thought the reporter was calling him a chicken,” the official said, adding that Trump was “reasonably” frustrated with the phrase.

The acronym was coined in early May by a Financial Times columnist and is now used as shorthand by some on Wall Street to indicate that traders shouldn’t fret too much about Trump’s tariff threats, since he usually backs down.

Trump also vented his frustrations to his team following the exchange, sources familiar with the matter said. He was not only irked by the term itself but also by his team’s failure to tell him about the phrase gaining traction.

It’s a window into what may offend Trump the most: He took clear umbrage with the idea that people perceive his tariff adjustments as weakness. Trump’s real-time response also demonstrated his view that the shorthand diminished what he sees as an essential negotiating tactic on trade. He explained on Wednesday that sometimes he sets “a ridiculous high number” for tariff rates and then relents if other nations give in to his demands.

“It clearly bothered him, primarily because it demonstrated a lack of understanding about how he actually utilizes those threats for leverage,” said one person familiar with the matter. “But obviously he’s not a guy who looks kindly on weakness, so the idea anyone would think that with respect to his actions isn’t received well.”

Trump, in just the last week, has threatened 50% tariffs on the European Union, then extended the deadline in return for more concrete talks and has threatened to re-escalate his China trade war in an effort to secure compliance with last month’s agreement. Last month, he also imposed a 145% tariff on imported Chinese goods, before bringing that back down to 30% this month.

Stacked shipping containers, gantry cranes, and a construction site are seen at the Yantian International Container Terminal through tree branches, with workers and machinery visible in the foreground, on April 12, 2025 in Shenzhen, China.

The TACO acronym’s journey to the Oval Office is, in and of itself, a telling narrative about the current information environment.

It originated with a May 2 column from Robert Armstrong, a Financial Times commentator and author of the publication’s popular finance newsletter “Unhedged.”

Armstrong coined the phrase as a way of capturing Trump’s frequent willingness to walk back, pause or provide carve outs from his most expansive tariff threats. The idea, in short, is that Trump’s threats had created a pattern of driving stocks down, only to see them surge when he changed course weeks later.

He used the term to try and explain the steady upward trajectory taking place in late April, which he wrote had “a lot to do with markets realizing that the U.S. administration does not have a very high tolerance for market and economic pressure, and will be quick to back off when tariffs cause pain. This is the TACO theory: Trump Always Chickens Out.”

The acronym became something of a running joke on finance Twitter, the informative and generally good-humored corner of X where financial commentators and analysts debate the day’s most interesting, market moving or, at times, arcane topics.

Within a few weeks, the TACO trade had become a fixture of Wall Street chatter and started appearing in client notes from financial analysts and economists. The rapid acceleration of the acronym’s role in finance lexicon caught Armstrong, who has been sharply critical of the economic merits of Trump’s tariffs, by surprise.

“The mysteries of social media and media in general are still completely hidden to me,” Armstrong said on the FT’s “Unhedged” podcast.

“The outcome I really, really hope does not happen is that this has anything to do with the president stopping his habitual chickening out,” Armstrong added. “Let us state clearly, chickening out is good and something to be celebrated. Bad policy chickening out — hooray.”

Trump made it clear to the reporter on Wednesday that he preferred a different description.

“You call that chickening out?” Trump asked. “It’s called negotiation.”

Kylie Atwood contributed to this report.



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