I’m no arbiter of good taste, and I think it’s safe to say that neither is Sen. John Fetterman. In fact, I’d hazard a guess and say we’re both pretty big fans of bad taste.

He inexplicably loves Sheetz, I righteously love Wawa. He enjoys trolling his haters online, I enjoy squeezing as many terrible puns into stories as possible. He dresses like it’s summer and winter simultaneously, I shop at Ross Dress for Less.

So I was happy to see Fetterman campaign for his Senate seat last year in his trademark Carhartt hoodie and shorts, the standard outfit people in Pennsylvania have known him to govern in for years (an outfit which is standard — and thus relatable — in many parts of Pennsylvania).

If Fetterman would have put on a three-piece suit and crisscrossed the state talking to Pennsylvanians in their jeans and jerseys about the everyday issues facing them, it wouldn’t have come off as genuine. He might as well have brought a crudité plate.

But after he was inaugurated in a suit and tie, I assumed it would become his standard attire in the Capitol, not because that’s who he is, but because that’s what senators do.

It’s always seemed to me that no matter who you are when you go into politics, you inevitably change in order to play the game, or, just to stay in it. But after he was treated for clinical depression earlier this year — and spoke openly about it — Fetterman has worn his hoodie-and-shorts combo around the Capitol more and more (though when in the chamber, he’s worn a suit).

Fetterman has refused to play the Senate’s sartorial game and, as a result, instead of the system changing him, he may have helped changed the system.

Beginning Monday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) directed the chamber’s sergeant-at-arms to not enforce an informal dress code that required senators to wear business attire in the chamber.

While Schumer hasn’t said Fetterman inspired the change, the rest of the country has. Conservative talk show hosts and politicians have given Fetterman hell, calling the rule change “disgraceful” and a “dumbing down” of standards.

In classic Fetterman fashion, he’s given them hell right back.

“I guess to Fox News, wearing a hoodie is more of a scandal than grabbing the hog during a live musical or showing ding-a-ling pics in a public hearing, which are two actual things House Republicans have done lately,” Fetterman wrote to those on his campaign email list.

It’s not just Congress

While Fetterman may have helped precipitate the dress code change, it’s unlikely he’s the only reason for it. Richard Thompson Ford, a professor of law at Stanford Law School and the author of Dress Code: How the Laws of Fashion Made History, said “a lot of things were pointing in this direction.”

“Dress codes have been getting relaxed everywhere. In a sense, Congress is following a trend that’s already taken off in business, banking, law, and all over the place,” he said.

The relaxation of professional dress codes began in Silicon Valley and accelerated during the COVID-19 lockdown, Ford said. A greater diversity of Congressional members is another factor likely driving the move, he said, noting that in 2017, women in Congress protested just to be able to wear professional dresses and blouses without sleeves.

Fetterman has cultivated an image as someone who’s not a typical politician and his clothing signifies that, Ford said.

“I imagine he feels if he put on a blue suit and tie like everyone else in Washington now that he’s been elected, people will think he’ll turn into a typical Beltway politician,” he said.

Clothing has always been political and Pennsylvania statesmen bucking fashion norms to appear more relatable to the people they serve is nothing new, according to Ford.

“Ben Franklin quit wearing a powdered wig as a statement of solidarity with the average person rather than putting on airs as an aristocrat,” he said. “It’s continued to this day.”

Coded dress codes

Historically, workplace dress codes existed to make sure people convey an image their employer wants, but sometimes they’re used to subtly exclude the “wrong kind of person” too, by sending a message that if you’re not comfortable wearing a certain type of clothing, you don’t belong here, Ford said.

“Dress codes serve some valid purposes, but they also serve some purposes we’d feel uncomfortable with if stated openly,” he said.

So is the old adage that was drilled into many of us, “Don’t dress for the job you have, dress for the job you want,” no longer true?

“It’s still very much true, it’s just that the dress codes are changing … and to be successful in most fields you’re going to need to dress like a successful person in that field,” Ford said.

But politicians are different because their job is to impress voters, not a boss or their peers.

“They’re more like a celebrity creating an image than a typical employee who needs to impress the boss,” Ford said. “These politicians know their constituents, so even though it may not be popular with people nationwide, it’s certainly working for John Fetterman, so he has no reason to change.”

Fetterman’s refusal to change has led to a change in the system, and in a system that often rebuffs change, that’s a good thing. It’s a reminder that change is not impossible, even in government, and that sometimes we can effectuate it just by insisting on being who we are.

That said, I can’t help but wonder if a person of color or a woman had worn Fetterman’s attire as a senator, if it would have led to the same results.

“I think that for a woman or a person of color defining the rules is riskier and the implications that might be drawn are likely to be different,” Ford said. “A hoodie and baggie shorts on an African American person, for instance, I find it very hard to imagine it would work in the way it has for John Fetterman.”

  • @shalafi
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    451 year ago

    “I guess to Fox News, wearing a hoodie is more of a scandal than grabbing the hog during a live musical or showing ding-a-ling pics in a public hearing, which are two actual things House Republicans have done lately,” Fetterman wrote to those on his campaign email list."

    Bought time dems hit back hard. Keep hitting.

    • @MotoAsh
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      1 year ago

      Funny you say that, since the Dems don’t like the progressive Fetterman much at all.

  • @chemical_cutthroat
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    341 year ago

    I’ve known enough people in suits to know that I shouldn’t trust people in suits. Regardless of the axiom, clothes do not make the man.

      • Psaldorn
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        11 year ago

        And from a “tailor”, no less

    • @Sir_Premiumhengst
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      71 year ago

      Or maybe clothes do make the man. And it just so happens that suits will make the dishonest.

  • @Landmammals
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    231 year ago

    The GOP wants a circus, and Fetterman is bringing the WWF interview energy. I love it.

      • @Landmammals
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        21 year ago

        I’m not talking about post 2002 WWE energy. Fetterman has the macho Man Randy Savage energy. Fetterman supports the trees, and the beasties, and woe be unto those who seek to harm mother Earth’s climate! John Fetterman is the cream of the crop, and he’s going to rise to the top of the United States congress, unleashing a torrent of Democratic Justice.

        The WWF is now the wwe, and Randy Savage lays dead in the ground, cold like a discarded slim Jim. But The beat goes on. And John Fetterman is the drummer. The beat goes on. Call it the beat of the big show, call it the beat of the macho man, call it the beat of John fetterman, call with the beat of humanity demanding survival and justice. The beat goes on. And the heart of that beat, is Randy Savage who I know and love from the WWF. So without a hair of disrespect to mother Earth, I meant what I meant.

  • @SkyezOpen
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    221 year ago

    Also let’s be brutally honest here, when he wears a suit he looks like kingpin.

  • @BuckWylde
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    141 year ago

    The amount of integrity he has by not wearing a suit and remaining who he is should be admired, especially in a position of power. Imagine that, a politician having some integrity.

  • @ZMonster
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    51 year ago

    He inexplicably loves Sheetz

    You shut your pixie trap. I’d give my left arm for a turkey MTO rn.

  • @ramenshaman
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    11 year ago

    Isn’t he like 6’8"? Are all the dudes in the elevator in that pic just super tall as well?

    • @jeffwOPM
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      11 year ago

      He’s more like 6’5 or 6’6”

  • @oldbaldgrumpy
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    -41 year ago

    This just makes America look lazy. Jesus, how hard is it to dress for work?

  • @flossdaily
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    1 year ago

    If it was a Republican dressing like this, I think Democrats wouldn’t be so quick to defend or excuse it. They would see it as a sign of disrespect for the institution.

    Of course, the difference there is that the Republicans have a history of disrespecting the institution… So that complicates the issue.

    On the other hand, we’re not talking about loosening things up a little bit. This isn’t a guy who’s wearing an open collar without a tie, or wearing a t-shirt with a sportcoat. He’s dressing like he’s lounging in a dorm room.

    It really does seem deliberately disrespectful.

    • @Fedizen
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      1 year ago

      Tell me which does more damage to the respectability of an institution:

      A) not adhering to a dress code first envisioned in the 1850s.

      B) Jacking a dude off in a theater while there’s kids in the row behind

      Fetterman could be seen as modernizing the institution by allowing modern attire; gone are the days of powdered judges wearing white wigs and hopefully soon the shitty business suits too.

      Boebert tho, like gotta give it to her for living her 40s like a high school teenager.

    • @MotoAsh
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      1 year ago

      Nah, being disrespectful would be getting in a personal argument with someone on the floor of congress and calling them a “stupid bitch”.

      Disrespecting the country would be passing tax cuts for the rich or more subsidies for oil. Disrespecting the country is shutting down unions. Disrespecting the country would be risking a failure to pass a budget over partisan squabbling.

      Fix your priorities, because if clothes can disrespect the country, you should be furious with their actual actions.

      • @Torvum
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        41 year ago

        These people work 133 days out of the year making 200k after voting for a raise of tax payer salaries for themselves, again. They have no limit on sick days or PTO, they have a mandated summer month vacation, massive amounts of holiday breaks, with an average of 18 weekly hours worked. They don’t even have a real job and are now smearing it in your face that they can even take a casual friday over you every day if they want.

        Yes, it’s disrespectful.

    • @jeffwOPM
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      111 year ago

      Why is it disrespectful? The article makes the analogy to Ben Franklin. I’m sure people said the same thing about his fashion choices.

    • @the_q
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      10 months ago

      deleted by creator

    • @ExtraMedicated
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      101 year ago

      Respect must be earned. Most of our lawmakers aren’t even trying to earn it. Just a bunch of finger-pointing and name-calling.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      it could seem disrespectful, and I’ll agree that the circumstances do matter.

      for Fetterman, we have a few things:

      • dressing for his constituents. frankly, is be happier if more politicians paid attention to who they were representing than party or lobby interests. that said, there’s a time and place - I want my lawyer to show up looking professional, so why not my legislator?

      • he didn’t, as far as I’m aware, request the change. he’s just taking advantage of it. fair enough. it’s also not a formal rule, more custom that was being enforced, and now is not.

      • he’s publicly been dealing with depression. maybe he can’t face wearing a suit some days, but he can get his job done in something less restrictive, more familiar. I’ve been there.

      • before the rule change, he’d show up and vote from the door in his relaxed outfit. getting his job done, not being disrespectful by sitting in his relaxed outfit. I can respect the hell out of a guy who can’t quite bring himself to wear a suit, but still gets his job done and treats his coworkers with respect.

      so to me, this reads like Fetterman is doing his best to do the job the people gave him, despite other (personal) issues. Schumer decided not to enforce a rule that was causing unnecessary difficulty for Fetterman (and who knows who else) but isn’t relevant to the job at hand.

      maybe think about it like your bank teller wearing orthotic sneakers instead of heels. not because she’s being disrespectful of her clients, but because the job is easier if she’s not also constantly thinking about how her shoes make her feet hurt.

    • @silentknyght
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      21 year ago

      This was a politely worded counterpoint. If Lemmy wants discussion, this shouldn’t be down voted. Else, we devolve into an echo chamber with no substance quickly followed by no participation.

      I, personally, think this comment is interesting for discussion. I am regularly half dressed in online work meetings. No one sees me, though, because my webcam is off. My contributions are judged by my voice, by my arguments themselves, not my appearance. I think most would agree this is a good thing. Why isn’t it true for senators, too?

      The only thing I can imagine is that there MIGHT be some degree of restraint that occurs when formally dressed. If everyone was casually dressed, would behavior be even worse? I think that’s also a fair question.