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Donald Trump has been hit with a new viral nickname—'NACHO'. Photo: X/The White House.

From TACO to NACHO: Trump’s new nickname explodes amid Hormuz tensions

| @indiablooms | May 01, 2026, at 12:19 am

US President Donald Trump has been hit with a new viral nickname—“NACHO”, short for “Not A Chance Hormuz Opens”—as commentary grows around tensions involving the Strait of Hormuz and shifting geopolitical messaging.

The phrase was coined by Bloomberg columnist Javier Blas, who suggested it reflects public skepticism over the situation and the repeated uncertainty around whether threats or negotiations in the region will translate into firm outcomes.

“We thought we were getting a TACO, ‘Trump Always Chickens Out.’ But so far we are getting a NACHO, ‘Not A Chance Hormuz Opens,’” Blas wrote on X.

What ‘TACO’ meant before NACHO took over

The earlier nickname “TACO” (Trump Always Chickens Out) originated in financial commentary, referencing a pattern where aggressive policy threats were followed by reversals—often triggering short-lived market swings.

That framing, popularized by financial media discussions, became shorthand among analysts tracking policy announcements and subsequent walk-backs.

Trump dismisses criticism, calls it ‘negotiation’

When previously asked about the “TACO” label, Trump rejected the characterization, calling it a “nastiest question” and defending his approach as strategic negotiation rather than retreat.

“I chicken out? Oh, I’ve never heard that,” he said.

New variations of ‘NACHO’ emerge online

The new “NACHO” acronym has already spawned variations. Fox News host Griff Jenkins reportedly offered a different spin: “Never Avoids Confronting Hard Obstacles.”

The rapid evolution of such labels highlights how political rhetoric and financial commentary increasingly merge into viral shorthand on social media.

Strait of Hormuz at the center of tensions

The discussion comes amid heightened geopolitical rhetoric around the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy chokepoint through which a significant share of the world’s oil shipments pass.

Iranian leaders have recently intensified warnings regarding the region, further amplifying market sensitivity and political commentary around potential disruptions.

Iran escalates rhetoric over Gulf presence

Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei recently issued a strongly worded statement criticizing US presence in the Persian Gulf, framing the region as central to national identity and global trade routes.

Iranian officials have also reiterated claims that control over the Strait of Hormuz is strategically vital, further contributing to international concern over energy stability.

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