The New Zealand Herald

Vogue endorses Hillary Clinton

Fashion bible gets behind presidenti­al candidate

- Robin Givhan — Washington Post

Vogue has endorsed Hillary Clinton for president. This is a first for the New York-based glossy — and a smart move by the so-called fashion bible.

In an unsigned letter posted on the magazine’s website and published in the November print edition, the editors explain: “We understand that Clinton has not always been a perfect candidate, yet her fierce intelligen­ce and considerab­le experience are reflected in policies and positions that are clear, sound, and hopeful.”

The endorsemen­t is accompanie­d by a 1993 Annie Leibovitz portrait of Clinton that, in the Vogue manner, wraps her in a glow so golden that she practicall­y looks gilded.

And while actress Emma Stone is on the November cover — not Clinton — the word “vote” has been incorporat­ed into a patriotic red, white and blue version of the Vogue logo.

For anyone who follows fashion or politics, this endorsemen­t probably comes as no surprise: Anna Wintour, the magazine’s editor-in-chief, has been vocal in her support of Clinton, as well as financiall­y generous to her campaign. Indeed, she is co-hosting a fundraiser for her, alongside designer Diane von Furstenber­g and top Clinton aide Huma Abedin, in Washington, DC, on November 3.

But this is the first time that the magazine, as an entity, has endorsed a candidate.

The reason for stepping into the political fray? A representa­tive says it’s because of the unique nature of this campaign: It is a spectacle of historic proportion. The country has the potential to elect a woman as president. And the race has been a fraught circus of insults, accusation­s and falsehoods. The magazine did not want to stand silent.

In speaking Hillary Clinton is the fashion magazine’s first presidenti­al endorsemen­t. to its 1.2 million subscriber­s, Vogue may well be preaching to the choir, a largely affluent, educated and female readership.

Other fashion magazines are deeply engaged in politics. The politician­s who sit down for interviews with Elle or Glamour or Cosmopolit­an know it’s an opportunit­y to reach out beyond an audience of political junkies, to get their points across in an environmen­t that is noncombati­ve.

The downside, of course, is that sometimes the resulting stories are so soft-focus that thoughtful criticism and challengin­g questionin­g go miss

ing. But it’s better that they are having an overly polite conversati­on than none at all. Newspapers have a long history of endorsing candidates but with informatio­n coming from all directions, can one newspaper endorsemen­t truly tip the scale? The endorsemen­t in Vogue, however, is much more like an opinion shared at the meeting of an exclusive club. The audience is not broad; on some level, its readers have bought into the Vogue point of view, the Vogue lifestyle, the Vogue message. So perhaps the magazine’s endorsemen­t will serve as a reminder to its faithful to go out and do what they know is right. Vogue lends an air of glamour and panache to whatever appears in its pages. So perhaps it can put a bit of the shine back on the act of voting at a time when so many see their choices as one of two evils. Vogue does not speak for the entire American fashion industry, but it has outsize influence. Its endorsemen­t reflects the many ways this multibilli­on-dollar industry has supported Clinton — whether in fundraisin­g, merchandis­e design or social messaging. ·

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Picture / AP
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