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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Kamala Harris and the Politics of Style

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 30 August 2024

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As the first female, Black, and South Asian Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris’s every move is closely watched — from her policy decisions to her wardrobe. With Harris now leading the Democratic ticket in the 2024 presidential election, her style and beauty choices — from her for her sleek silk press hairstyle to her endless variety of pantsuits — have sparked renewed discussion. 


“She is communicating something, even if it's not remarkable,” said BoF senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young. “No one truly opts out of signalling something with how they present themselves.”


This week on The Debrief, BoF executive editor Brian Baskin sat down with Butler-Young and editorial apprentice Yola Mzizi to explore how Harris’s beauty and fashion choices are being interpreted by different audiences across the political spectrum, and what that means for the future of political style. 


Key Insights:

  • Harris’s signature silk-pressed hairstyle has deep roots. “It's a centuries old way of straightening hair, and it's been around for generations upon generations. Most people associate it with just the hair that they have to have for Easter Sunday, or the style that the grandmothers would have,” Mzizi explains. Despite the history, Black Gen-Z voters have embraced the style, calling it the presidential silk press. “It's a way to support her candidacy in a fun way,” said Mzizi. 


  • Harris’ wardrobe choices are being closely scrutinised, which has led her to more streamlined, straightforward ensembles. “The pantsuits, specifically the colour schemes — black, grey, navy blue, or just blues, with an occasional pastel, a pump as the shoe, or occasional Converse and pearls — are very much in line with how politicians dress,” said Butler-Young. Meanwhile, male politicians, like Harris’s vice-presidential nominee, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, have more freedom to experiment. “You look at her running mate Tim Walz, and his ability to sort of play around with style with those well-worn red wing boots, the camouflage hats, rather than being distracting, they actually endear some voters to him. … Kamala, for all intents and purposes, doesn't seem to have the licence to do that.” 


  • The 2024 election has highlighted the growing role of fashion and beauty in politics. Black-owned beauty brand BLK/OPL was centre stage at the DNC providing makeup services as the event’s first beauty sponsor. “Harris's candidacy is opening up new avenues for different kinds of brands to have their say in this larger conversation,” Mzizi notes.


  • Should Harris win the presidency, she could use her platform to further influence the intersection of fashion and politics. Harris has already hinted at this with her past choices by wearing Black designers like Christopher John Rogers and Sergio Hudson. “She'll have more leeway to [support minority designers] when she's empowered. Right now, I think she's constrained … by this idea of having to cater to this broad, collective public palette.”


Additional resources



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, it's Imran. While I'm taking some holiday, we'll be sharing some new episodes of the debrief.

0:07.1

Hosted by my colleagues Sheena Butler Young and Brian Baskin, the debrief goes deep inside our most

0:13.0

popular BOF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. Beginning in September,

0:19.8

a new episode of the debrief

0:21.2

will come out every Tuesday

0:22.8

here on this feed

0:23.9

as well as the debrief's own dedicated feed.

0:27.3

So subscribe now if you haven't already.

0:29.8

We'll be back to regularly scheduled programming

0:32.1

of the BOF podcast

0:33.2

on Friday, September 6th. Hello and welcome to the debrief from the Business of Fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular B.OF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. I'm executive editor Brian Baskin.

0:58.1

Please welcome the Democratic nominee for president, vice president of the United States

1:03.2

of America, Kamala Harris.

1:10.8

Kamala Harris made history as the first female, black, and South Asian vice president of the United States.

1:17.0

Since she replaced Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket a little over a month ago,

1:21.6

she has leapfrog Donald Trump in the polls and become a full-fledged cultural icon.

1:26.8

Inevitably, that has led to intense scrutiny

1:29.1

of her policy stances, her choice of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as vice president,

1:34.4

and of course, her appearance. Today I'm joined by Sheena Butler Young, senior correspondent

1:39.8

and Yola Mzizi, editorial apprentice at BOF, to discuss how Harris's beauty and fashion choices

1:46.3

are being interpreted by different audiences across the political spectrum and what that means

1:51.4

for the future of political style. Hello, Sheena, and hello, Yola. Welcome to the debrief podcast.

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