Hillary Clinton
Related: About this forumFirst Obama, now Hillary: the Fashion Industry's "undisputed candidate of choice" (HILLARY GROUP)
For the past two election cycles, Barack Obama was fashions undisputed candidate of choice, championed in particular by top bundler Anna Wintour. The Vogue editor-in-chief might as well have been his campaign manager: She hosted multiple fund-raising dinners for Obama, marshaled everyone from Marc Jacobs to Proenza Schouler to Narciso Rodriguez to design items for his Runway to Win initiative, and put him on the cover of Mens Vogue (R.I.P.) twice. Of course, it didnt hurt that Michelle Obama has been a First Lady fashion plate on the order of Jackie Kennedy or Nancy Reagan, drawing attention to young American designers with her much-chronicled wardrobe choices.
But as politics moves on, fashion is redirecting its energies toward Hillary Clinton. Yes, she's been vilified for her pantsuits, but now the industry is throwing out its spindly arms to her....
Its hardly a shocker that the fashion industry would support the female Democratic front-runner Republicans, at least public ones, are pretty thin on the ground in this world but Clinton is excelling even by that standard. She not only has the best campaign swag, she has the support of Wintour, Donna Karan, and Tory Burch. This weekend, according to the Daily Mail, Burch threw her a fund-raising lunch at her South Hampton home Wintour and Karan were the co-hosts, and designers Stacey Bendet and Jill Stuart were also in attendance.
Rumors of an upcoming Clinton Vogue cover persist, and she mingled with Valentino and Ralph Lauren at a DVF event a few months back. She fits in well with this glittering crowd much more believably so than Chelsea Clinton during her short-lived immersion into all things Versace.
It wasn't always so. Clinton seems to have overcome the reluctance she had, during her 2008 run, to ally herself with fashion and glossy magazines, "princess effect" be damned. Back then, Obama scooped up her fashion supporters, and she lost key Wintour brownie points when she declined to appear on the cover of Vogue, reportedly because she didn't want to look overly feminine. Said Wintour at the time, "The notion that a contemporary woman must look mannish in order to be taken seriously as a seeker of power is frankly dismaying." They've evidently double-air-kissed and made up since then, but make no mistake: Clinton needs Big Fashion just as much as it needs her.
http://nymag.com/thecut/2015/08/hillary-is-winning-the-fashion-schmoozing-race.html?mid=twitter_cut via New York Magazine
MADem
(135,425 posts)They all look like they could use a good meal~~!