Modern anti-Chinese sentiment in the United States may stem from concerns about China's growing geopolitical influence. The '
rise of China' has been named the top news story of the 21st century by the
Global Language Monitor, based on its prevalence in global media and social platforms. During the
United States 2010 elections, both major political parties ran numerous
negative advertisements focusing on candidates' alleged support for
free trade with China. Some stock images accompanying ominous voiceovers about China were actually of
Chinatown, San Francisco. An advertisement called "Chinese Professor," depicting a 2030 conquest of the West by China, used local Asian American extras to portray Chinese roles without informing the actors of the nature of the shoot. Columnist Jeff Yang noted a "blurry line between Chinese and Chinese-Americans" in the campaign. Other editorials have stated that the video is not anti-Chinese.
Wolf Amendment As component of the
Wolf Amendment, many American space researchers were prohibited from working with Chinese citizens affiliated with a Chinese state enterprise or entity. In April 2011, the
112th United States Congress banned NASA from using its funds to host Chinese visitors at NASA facilities because of espionage concerns. Earlier in 2010, US Representative
John Culberson, had urged President
Barack Obama not to allow further contact between NASA and the
China National Space Administration (CNSA).
Donald Trump's campaign and presidency 2016 presidential campaign In November 2015,
Donald Trump promised to designate China as a
currency manipulator on his first day in office. He pledged "swift, robust and unequivocal" action against Chinese piracy,
counterfeit American goods, and the theft of American
trade secrets and intellectual property. He also condemned China's "illegal
export subsidies and lax labor and environmental standards." When asked about potential Chinese retaliation to the implementation of tariffs, such as sales of
US bonds, Trump judged such a scenario to be unlikely: "They won't crash our currency. They will crash their economy. That's what they are going to do if they start playing that." In a May 2016 speech, Trump responded to concerns regarding a potential
trade war with China: "We're losing $500 billion in trade with China. Who the hell cares if there's a trade war?" Trump also said in May 2016 that China is "raping" the U.S. with free trade.
First presidency (2017–21) In January 2018, Trump launched
a trade war with China and he also began to impose new
visa restrictions on
foreign students and
visiting scholars of Chinese nationality; many affected said that they experienced delays in renewing their visas or even outright cancellations of their visas. According to the results of a
Gallup poll which were published in February 2019, China was considered the greatest enemy of the United States by 21% percent of American respondents, only second to Russia. In April 2019,
FBI Director Christopher Wray said that China posed a "whole of a society threat". In May 2019,
Director of Policy Planning Kiron Skinner said that China "is the first great power competitor of the US that is not
Caucasian." The current deterioration of relations has led to a spike in anti-Chinese sentiment in the US. According to a
Pew Research Center poll released in August 2019, 60 percent of Americans have negative opinions about China, with only 26 percent holding positive views. The same poll found that China was named as America's greatest enemy by 24 percent of respondents in US, tied along with Russia. In March 2020, Trump referred to the
COVID-19 outbreak in the United States as the
"Chinese Virus", despite the fact that in February 2020, the
World Health Organization strongly advised the public not to
racially profile the
SARS‑CoV‑2 coronavirus as the "Chinese virus" or the "Wuhan virus". Additionally, the racist terms "Wuflu" and "Kung Flu" emerged in the United States during this period as pejorative and xenophobic ways of referring to
COVID-19. These terms are linked to
Wuhan, where the virus was first detected, or China in general, via
portmanteau with terms from traditional
Chinese Martial Arts,
Wushu and
Kung Fu, and have been used by President Trump and members of his administration in an official capacity. Use of these terms has drawn widespread criticism for their perceived racial insensitivity. In May 2020, a
West Virginia-raised
Chinese-American CBS reporter,
Weijia Jiang, questioned Trump at a White House coronavirus briefing about his stance on testing and he told her to question China. The reporter responded to Trump by asking him why he singled her out by stating that she should question China, which led to an abrupt end to the briefing. In December 2020,
Tennessee Senator
Marsha Blackburn tweeted that "China has a
5,000 year history of cheating and stealing. Some things will never change...", resulting in a backlash by Chinese-American civil rights activists, arguing that her tweet insulted people of Chinese descent.
COVID-19 pandemic station amidst the COVID-19 pandemic The
COVID-19 pandemic was first reported in the city of Wuhan, Hubei, China, in December 2019, and as a result, acts and displays of
Sinophobia, have increasingly occurred, as well as incidents of
prejudice, xenophobia, discrimination,
violence, and racism against
people of East Asian ancestry. According to a June 2020
Pew Research study, 58% of Asian Americans believe that racist views of them had increased since the pandemic. A study by the
New York University College of Arts & Science found that there was no overall increase of Anti-Asian sentiment among the American population, instead it suggested that "already prejudiced persons" had felt authorized by the pandemic to act openly on their prejudices.
Joe Biden's Presidency Since the start of the Biden Presidency on January 20, 2021,
President Joe Biden has described
tensions with China as a competition between democracy and autocracy. Studies suggest that framing the relationship between the United States and China as a great power competition foments anti-Asian sentiment among White Americans. According to an analysis conducted by Vladimir Enrique and Medenica David Ebner at
Asia Times in June 2021, White Americans are more likely to support war with China if such a military confrontation between the two countries ever materializes. White Americans described as "racially resentful" were 36 percentage points more likely than other White Americans to perceive China posing as a major geopolitical threat back in 2012 and 20 percentage points more likely compared in 2016. According to a poll done by
Pew Research Center in February 2021, 55% of Americans support limiting Chinese students studying in the United States, while 43% oppose such restrictions. An open-ended poll done by Pew Research Center in May–June 2023, 50% of Americans consider China to be the greatest threat to the U.S. A report which was published by
Stop AAPI Hate listed 43% of AAPI (Asian American and Pacific Islanders) individuals reporting incidents from 2020 to 2022 to be ethnically Chinese. A survey in 2021 found that 49% of AAPIs felt safe going out, 65% felt worried about the safety of family members and elders, 32% of parents were concerned their child would be a victim of anti-AAPI discrimination at school, 95% of Asian Americans who reported a hate incident to Stop AAPI Hate viewed the U.S. as dangerous to them, 98% of Asian elders who experienced hate incidents believed the U.S. has become more physically dangerous for Asians, 49% reported anxiety or depression, and 72% named hate against them as their greatest source of stress. A national survey estimated that at least three million AAPIs experienced hate incidents between March 2021 and March 2022. According to Stop AAPI Hate, 20% of reported hate incidents involve scapegoating, 96% of scapegoating incidents blame Asians and Asian Americans for the COVID-19 epidemic, 4% for national security reasons such as spying for the Chinese Communist Party, and 1% for being economic threats. Stop AAPI Hate notes that both Democrats and Republicans use "rhetoric that paints China as an economic threat to America's existence", mirroring language used in scapegoating East Asians and Asian Americans at large. A report conducted by Tobita Chow in 2021 used a table to show parallels between the "China threat" narratives and sentiments expressed in anti-Asian incidents such as "China is cheating the US" and "You are a liar, a cheater", or "China is an espionage or influence threat" and "You are a spy, you are CCP". According to Chow, believers of American exceptionalism who perceive
American global domination to be at risk of being replaced by a rising and
more geopolitically assertive China, exacerbated by global economic problems and weak economic growth, contribute to a sense of anxiety that fosters zero-sum competition between countries. In discussions about China, the two claims that China is a threat to American hegemony and that it is an existential threat to the US and Americans are often used interchangeably regardless of the difference in their plausibility. Chow says that a deep commitment to American exceptionalism can make these two claims identical to each other. Anti-China messaging has been used to build bipartisan support for a number of economic policies that promote investment in infrastructure, research, technology, and job creation as necessary to
counter China. Some special interest groups such as the military industrial complex stand to materially benefit from the "China threat" narratives and promote them for that reason. Chow says that "narratives about China can shape popular perceptions of Chinese people" and that the opposite is also true, where narratives of Chinese people also justify perceptions of China. A research article submitted in September 2022 and published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in June 2023 states that scholars of Chinese descent feel significant unease in the US: 83% received insults in a non-professional setting in the last year, 72% feel unsafe as a researcher, 35% feel unwelcome in the US, and 61% have considered leaving the US. According to survey results released on April 27, 2023, nearly 75% of Chinese Americans have experienced racism in the past twelve months. The survey, conducted by
Columbia University and the
Committee of 100 with 6,500 respondents, found that 7% reported property destruction, 9% experienced physical assault or intimidation, 20% faced verbal or online harassment, and 46% encountered unequal treatment. On April 27, 2023,
Columbia University and the Committee of 100 announced the results of a survey on Chinese Americans. According to the survey results based on the answers of 6,500 participants across the US, 74% of Chinese Americans have experienced racism in the past twelve months. One in five reported verbal or online harassment several times in the past twelve months. Nearly half the respondents (46%) reported unequal treatment compared to others. Almost one in ten (9%) reported physical assault or intimidation while 7% reported destruction of property. According to the 2023 STAATUS Index survey, nearly half of Americans believe that negative views of China have contributed to anti-Asian attacks or incidents. Among the reasons for anti-Asian hate, 33% of respondents believe that viewing China as an economic threat is a contributing factor while 47% believe that viewing China as an espionage threat is a contributing factor.
Foreign purchase of or acquisition of title to real property A
Texas Senate bill tabled in 2023 by state representatives of the
Republican Party, known as SB 147, was met with intense backlash particularly by Asian American groups. The bill would prohibit "certain aliens or foreign entities" from acquiring real property in the state of
Texas, including those with affiliations or origins from China. The bill has also found support from
Governor of Texas Greg Abbott. Critics have compared the bill to the racist
Chinese Exclusion Act and called it
unconstitutional. Others also added that it may lead to a negative
snowball effect for further racist legislation, particularly targeting Chinese people and East Asians in general.
Sylvester Turner,
Mayor of Houston, referred to the bill as "just down right wrong" and that "it is more divisive than anything else". State representative
Gene Wu added that "this type of legislation. This growing anti-Asian and anti-immigrant sentiment is a direct attack on our community and on our city, quite frankly." The legislation does not give any exceptions to asylum seekers,
lawful permanent residents, valid visa holders or
dual citizens (the bill also covered people from North Korea, Iran and Russia). Further protests in the streets of
Houston against the bill were held by Asian American groups and allies in February 2023. On May 8, 2023, Florida governor
Ron DeSantis signed bills SB 264 and HB 1355 banning Chinese citizens from buying land in the state. Critics have warned that the bills could contribute to discrimination against the Chinese and other immigrants. Democratic state Rep.
Anna V. Eskamani voiced concerns about the impact on Asian Americans. Asian American organizations compared the bills to the
Alien land laws and the
Chinese Exclusion Act. ==Accusations of spying==