Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Steil gets roasted for tweet making fun of masks manufactur­ed in China

- Daniel Bice Contact Daniel Bice at (414) 313-6684 or dbice@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter @DanielBice or on Facebook at fb.me/daniel.bice.

For members of the Wisconsin congressio­nal delegation not named Ron Johnson, it’s hard to get the public to pay attention to what they’re saying.

In the past 24 hours, however, U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil was able to break through in a single tweet, winning the attention he was craving.

Not that it went as planned. With a mere 16 words, the secondterm Republican managed to suggest he can’t read English, doesn’t know how to put on a mask and angered an important industry in Wisconsin.

Steil’s tweet was part of the Republican pushback against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s policy requiring members to wear masks when attending House floor sessions and distributi­ng masks manufactur­ed in China.

“Speaker Pelosi sent out N-95 masks to every House office,” Steil tweeted, including a picture of the mask and an inspection certificate. “Unfortunat­ely, I can’t read the instructio­ns.”

It didn’t take long for the self-assured post to become a self-own.

First, the Janesville Republican didn’t post a picture of the KN95 (not N-95) instructio­ns, which are apparently on the outside of the packaging. The product certificate, which he did include in the picture, was written in both Chinese and English, meaning most members of Congress should be able to understand them.

“So brave of you to admit you can’t read English,” Kevin Kruse, a historian at Princeton University, responded to Steil.

“You need instructio­ns to put on a mask?” wrote Jerome Burke.

“The point of it was not about whether he can read English or not,” tweeted Shen Shiwei. “It was the xenophobia.”

One individual noted that this mask brand, Powecom KN95, is sold exclusivel­y by Bona Fide Masks, a fourthgene­ration family business based in New York.

Several offered Steil help by linking to videos showing that the mask needs to go over both the mouth and the nose. One tweeted the instructio­ns after searching for them on Google.

“Do you always fact-check jokes, or is this a part-time job?” asked Khan Krum Gaming.

“I just noticed that the label in my pants has French and Spanish on it, and now I’ve got both legs jammed down the left trouser leg,” joked No Ads Dupree.

In no joking mood was Will Hsu, president of Hsu Ginseng Enterprise­s in Wausau. His company is one of the biggest ginseng producers in Wisconsin.

Noting he was a state resident and a U.S. citizen, Hsu accused Steil and other members of Congress of having an “anti-China stance” that he said has cost Wisconsin ginseng farmers big bucks during the current trade war.

“But please, keep complainin­g about masks and goods made in China,” Hsu tweeted.

In all, some 14,400 people commented on Steil’s post, and another 9,000 either retweeted it or retweeted it with commentary. It attracted more than 13,700 likes.

Steil’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States