President Trump told a female reporter Sunday to 'keep your voice down' as she asked him about what he did to warn the American people in February that the coronavirus was being spread like 'wildfire.'

The confrontation with Weijia Jiang was the latest angry exchange at a coronavirus briefing, which critics say have seen disproportionately attack female and non-white reporters.

CBS News' Jiang was praised by many online for keeping her cool but also attacked by Trump's loyalists and accused of being an 'activist' against him.

Jiang pointed to comments Trump had made Thursday in which he said he was 'angry' because information about the coronavirus 'should have been told to us' earlier.

'Many Americans are saying the exact same thing about you, that you should have warned them the virus was spreading like wildfire through the month of February, instead of holding rallies with thousands of people,' Jiang said. 'Why did you wait so long to warn them?'

Trump interrupted Jiang to ask her 'who are you with?' and then pointed to his late January ban of flights coming in from China.

'Chinese nationals ... by the way, not Americans who were also coming in from China,' Jiang corrected the president.

President Trump told a female reporter on Sunday to 'keep your voice down' and 'just relax' when she asked him why he didn't sound the alarm sooner that the coronavirus was spreading like wildfire

CBS News' Weijia Jiang pointed to the president's comments - that he was 'angry' that the U.S. wasn't informed sooner about coronavirus - when asking why he didn't warn the American people sooner about the pandemic

Jiang detailed the encounter on Twitter Sunday, commenting that the president had told her to 'relax'

To this he responded to the reporter by saying, 'Nice and easy.' 'Nice and easy, just relax,' Trump said.

MEET TRUMP'S LATEST TARGET Weijia Jiang got her first broadcast news break for Channel One aged just 13 when she was a student reporter and anchor for the children's network which was also a proving ground for CNN's Anderson Cooper and Fox and Friends' Brian Kilmeade. Born in Xiamen, China, to parents who immigrated to West Virginia when she was two. They ran a Chinese restaurant in Buckhannon in the state's coal-mining belt. She went on to study at the College of William and Mary and Syracuse, in New York, before throwing herself into a local television career first in Maryland, then in New York. The 35-year-old moved to Washington D.C. in 2016 for CBS, and is now a permanent White House correspondent. An Edward R. Murrow Award-winner, the clash with Trump was not her first; in 2018, at the height of the storm over the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, he told her to 'sit down' and 'stop interrupting' when she pressed him to answer her question. She married her husband, Luther Lowe, a Washington D.C.-based executive with Yelp, in California two years ago in a ceremony performed by Jim Obergefell, whose fight for recognition of same sex-marriage led to the Supreme Court to legalize gay marriage. Advertisement

'We cut it off. People were amazed. These gentlemen, everybody was amazed that I did it. We had 21 people in the room, everybody was against it but me. Dr. Fauci said, had I not done that perhaps tens of thousands and maybe much more than that would have died,' the president continued. 'I was very early. Very, very early.'

Trump then pointed to a tweet that he had sent out earlier Sunday quoting Fox News Channels Bret Baier who wrote that at the February 19 Democratic debate in Las Vegas the coronavirus didn't come up once.

'It wasn't even mentioned - the Democrats,' Trump said.

'And you're the president, sir. And you didn't warn people that it was spreading so quickly,' Jiang shot back. 'And, by the way, when you issued the ban, the virus was already here.'

Trump then asked the CBS News reporter if she knew how many cases were in the United States when he implemented the China ban. 'Do you know the number?' he asked. 'Tell me. '

'But did you know that it was going to spread and become a pandemic?' Jiang answered instead.

The president said she needed to do her research.

'I did my research,' Jiang said. 'On the 23rd of March you said you knew this was going to be a pandemic, well before the [World Health Organization.] So did you know it was going to spread?'

Trump said that he 'did know it.'

'All - anybody knew it. Just - are you ready? How many cases were in the United States when I did my ban? How many people had died in the United States?' Trump continued to ask.

When Jiang took that to mean that he didn't think it was going to spread, Trump laid into her.

'Keep your voice down, please,' he told the reporter. 'Keep your voice down.'

Trump continued to ask Jiang how many cases were in the United States and how may people died.

'That's a fair point,' she offered.

The president again pointed out that nobody had died in the United States by that point.

'And yet I closed up the country and I believe there were no deaths - zero deaths - at the time I closed the country. Nobody was there. And you should say "thank you very much" for good judgment,' he told Jiang, before moving on.

The performance was part of a series of furious interventions in the course of a briefing that stretched an hour and 31 minutes Sunday.

Backing: Jiang was praised online for her questioning at the coronavirus briefing

Political point: Democrats got in on the praise, using it to attack Trump

Alternative view: Fox News opinion editor Rudy Takala accused Jiang of being an 'anti-Trump activist.' Ironically his Twitter biog says he is a journalist but does not disclose that he has a long career as a Republican politician

'What I'm doing is I'm standing up for the men and women that have done such an incredible job,' he said when a CNN reporter asked why he was devoting so much time to showcasing praise with more than 40,000 Americans now dead. 'Nothing is about me,' the president insisted.

'You're never going to treat me fairly, many of you. And I understand that. I got here with the worst, most unfair press treatment they say in the history of the United States for a president,' Trump complained. 'They did say Abraham Lincoln had very bad treatment too.'

New York's Andrew Cuomo, who has consistently locked heads with the president in recent weeks, unloaded on Trump on live television Friday, mocking his demand for gratitude for federal help and saying: 'Thank you for doing your job'.

Cuomo followed this up with another swipe in his Saturday briefing where he recited Lincoln's famous quote - 'a house divided itself cannot stand' - and said there is 'no time for politics'.

Trump showed clips of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo praising the federal response during Sunday's White House briefing

Trump had trouble playing the first clip of Cuomo's Sunday press conference, as it cut off before it got to the 'good part'

The president also showed off a positive op-ed in the Wall Street Journal to the reporters gathered in the room

Congress nears deal on small business aid The Trump administration and Congress expect an agreement Monday on an aid package of up to $450 billion to boost a small-business loan program that has run out of money and add funds for hospitals and COVID-19 testing. As talks continued, President Donald Trump said there's a 'good chance' of reaching a bipartisan agreement with Democrats. 'We are very close to a deal,' Trump said Sunday at the White House. Along with the small business boost, Trump said the negotiators were looking at 'helping our hospitals,' particularly hard-hit rural health care providers. Advertisement

Trump made some news at the briefing - he said negotiations with Capitol Hill were 'getting close' to adds funds to the Paycheck Protection Program.

He also said he would utilize the Defense Production Act in order to increase the production of swabs.

The president then held up a swab and pulled it out of the packaging so the photographers in the room could get good visuals.

He then handed it off to Vice President Mike Pence, saying he could give it to his wife, Karen.

But Trump mostly used visuals in the briefing room Sunday to promote his own record.

After pulling out the positive Wall Street Journal op-ed he then began reading it to the room.

Trump also played clips of Cuomo twice, complaining that in the first clip 'they left out the good part'.

The video segments were from a press conference the New York governor held Sunday morning.

'The federal government stepped up and was a great partner,' Cuomo said in the first clip shown at the White House. 'I'm the first one to say it. We needed help, and they were there.'

The United States has by far the world's largest number of confirmed coronavirus cases, with more than 750,000 infections and over 40,000 deaths.

Cuomo said of Trump Friday: 'First of all, if he's sitting home watching TV, maybe he should get up and go to work, right. Second, let's keep emotion and politics out of this and personal ego if we can because this is about the people and our job and let's try to focus on that.

'The president doesn’t want to help on testing. I said 11 times, I said the one issue we need help with is testing. He said 11 times: "I don’t want to get involved in testing, it’s too complicated, it’s too hard". I know it’s too complicated and too hard. That’s why we need help. I can’t do an international supply chain.'

Walter Shaub, former director of the Office of Government Ethics, tweeted: 'Beyond being another taxpayer-funded campaign ad, this video clip also makes Trump look exceedingly weak. The video casts Cuomo as Trump's boss giving him a performance appraisal. (If only!).'

The president also told one reporter to 'keep your voice down, please'.

Spokesman Judd Deere gave Trump a note that said the other clip of Cuomo praising him was ready to be played

President Trump made some news at the briefing, saying he would use the Defense Production Act to have more swabs made

Trump hints at pardons for Paul Manafort and Roger Stone President Trump hinted that pardons for his associates Paul Manafort and Roger Stone could be on the table. 'You'll find out what I'm going to do,' Trump said at Sunday's press briefing when asked by DailyMail.com if he would free the two men amid coronavirus concerns. 'I'm not going to say what I'm going to do. But the whole thing turned out to be a scam', he added. On Friday night, Stone appeared on Fox News Channel and told host Tucker Carlson that serving time during the pandemic could kill him. Last week, lawyers for Manafort, who is serving a seven-year sentence at a federal facility in Loretto, Pennsylvania for bank fraud and tax evasion, asked the Bureau of Prisons director if he could serve his sentence at home 'for the duration of the on-going COVID-19 pandemic,' according to a letter obtained by CBS News. Advertisement

Later, spokesman Judd Deere passed along a note to the president informing him the second clip was ready to roll.

'I just think it's so good for people because it's bipartisan,' Trump said. 'This is not about Democrats, Republicans,' he continued. This is about a thing that hit our country, the likes of which has never happened to us before.'

In the second Cuomo clip, the New York governor talked about how the state ended up having the supplies they needed.

Cuomo had long feared about bed capacity and ventilators and in those areas the federal government had stepped in.

'We saved everyone? No. But have we lost anyone because we didn't have a bed or we didn't have a ventilator or we didn't have healthcare staff? No,' Cuomo said Sunday.

'The people we lost are the people we couldn't save, not for lack of trying and not for lack of doing everything we could do as a society, not only as a government and as a healthcare system.'

Trump had previously taken to Twitter to accuse Cuomo of 'complaining' – and suggested Cuomo failed to take advantage of federal help.

'We built you thousands of hospital beds that you didn't need or use,' Trump fumed.

Cuomo responded in an extended monologue during his daily press conference Friday: 'Show gratitude. How any times do you want me to say thank you? I'm saying 'thank you' for doing your job.'

'This was your role as president, okay?' he said.

'We are going to be looking at it': Trump hints HIS hotels should get government bailout because coronavirus has been 'devastating' for them as he urges governors to let them open up again 'relatively quickly'

Donald Trump on Sunday pledged to look into helping hotels left 'devastated' by closures in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

The president - who himself owns a number of hotels across the country - was asked about whether they will be offered help at his daily briefing.

After mentioning his 'wonderful place' in Doral, Florida, Trump said the closure of hotels 'is a big problem'. Asked about whether the small business relief would cover hotels, Trump replied: 'Even if it is owned by a big chain, that is devastating.

'If they have 200 hotels in the country and they are closed. We are going to be looking at it. It is a big problem. It is a lot of people employed.'

The entrance to the Trump National Doral resort is shown in Doral, Fla. Trump on Sunday pledged to look into helping hotels left 'devastated' by closures in the wake of COVID-19

Democrats and Republicans are near agreement on approving extra money to help small businesses hurt by the coronavirus pandemic and could seal a deal as early as Monday, Trump said Sunday.

An agreement on help for small businesses would end a stalemate over Trump's request to add $250 billion to a small-business loan program established last month as part of a $2.3 trillion coronavirus economic relief plan. That fund has already been exhausted.

Trump said Sunday: 'You have hotels that are massive buildings but if you have no income coming in...they have to be closed down. It is a terrible thing.

'I don't know that they are working on that specific problem but it is a problem they should be talking about.'

Discussing owners who go from 'having a successful hotel' with thousands of employees 'to all of a sudden closing it down', Trump added: 'Hopefully they will be able to open up relatively quickly.'