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Carl Court/Getty ImagesThe talk that has always circulated about British Prime Minister Theresa May’s trendy clothes points to something larger: An outfit always means more when it’s being worn by a politician.
Last week, the population of Britain was freaking out over a pair of pants — a pair of $1,250, wide-legged, brown leather pants. And Prime Minister Theresa May had the misfortune of wearing them.
The outcry came so quickly and spread so widely that it even received a name: “Trousergate.”
“I don’t have leather trousers,” former British Education Secretary Nicky Morgan chided. “I don’t think I’ve ever spent that much on anything, apart from my wedding dress.”
On the other side of the debate, feminists bemoaned the attention that is routinely paid to female politicians’ clothing choices and not to those of their male counterparts.
When men buy expensive suits — like the $17,000 garments worn by Donald Trump — “they’re praised for supporting a national craft,” the Daily Telegraph’s fashion director wrote.
But as much as some might insist that talk of style doesn’t have a place in the hallowed halls of governing, the two have always been inherently intertwined.
Here are some of the most famous instances of history’s fashion police calling out the people in charge:
Imelda Marcos
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When protestors stormed the palace in 1986, chasing the couple into exile, they were shocked to discover a 10,000-square-foot walk-in closet, 1,000 gowns, a four-foot high pile of imported underwear, and more than 2,700 pairs of shoes.
Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images
Congresswomen in Pants
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In 1993, Senators Barbara Mikulski and Carol Moseley-Braun protested by wearing pants to work and encouraging their staffs to do the same.
The dress-code was quickly amended soon after - stipulating that women could wear pants as long as they wore a jacket as well.
I repeat: This was 1993.
Pictured: U.S. first lady Hillary Clinton walks with (from left) Senators Carol Mosley Braun, Barbara Boxer, Barbara Mikulski, and Diane Feinstein on March 11, 1993. Their stance on pantsuits helped pave the way for the future presidential candidate's trademark look.Robert Giroux/AFP/Getty Images
Charles of France
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Scared of shattering, he began wearing heavily padded clothes and refused to be touched.Gallica Digital Library/Wikimedia Commons
Barack Obama
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Of course, people were quick to criticize that lack of red, white, and blue. Obama initially responded by saying that he had seen "people wearing a lapel pin but not acting very patriotic...I decided I won't wear that pin on my chest. Instead I'm going to try to tell the American people what I believe...and hopefully that will be a testimony to my patriotism."
But as the conversations about the missing pin's meaning continued to swell, it became clear that Obama's beliefs weren't enough. The American people needed a flag pin.
The president now wears one every day.Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Marie Antoinette
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Indeed, the French were more than a little displeased with their queen's diamond-encrusted gowns, two-foot high model-boat-filled hairstyles, and boredom-inspired habit of wearing nothing twice.Kevin Winter/Getty Images
William Henry Harrison
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Though this fashion choice has been blamed for the president catching pneumonia and dying three weeks later, an alternative cause of death has since been put forth.
It is more likely, modern epidemiologists say, that Harrison was killed by an infection caught from the festering, sewer-filled marsh a few blocks away from the White House.
Though this is a decidedly grosser way to go, at least we can stop blaming the poor man's style.Wikimedia Commons
Melania Trump
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Two days later, Trump's wife, Melania, appeared at the presidential debate wearing a $1,100 fuchsia blouse.
Coincidentally, the actual name of the blouse's style is: "the pussy-bow."Scott Olson/Getty Images
Mary Todd Lincoln
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In order to pay them off, she attempted to sell excess manure from the White House and persuade other Republican members of government to give her the money as a sort of "thank you" for their political seats.Wikimedia Commons
Muammar Gaddafi
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The former ruler of Libya wore everything from leopard print hats to wizard's robes to a military uniform festooned with unearned medals.
Gaddafi's costumes always and intentionally stood in stark contrast to his fellow Libyans, suggesting an opulence that for many in his country simply did not exist.Marwan Naamani/AFP/Getty Images
George Washington
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On the plus side, those same issues might have contributed significantly to the defeat of the British at the battle of Yorktown to effectively end the Revolutionary War.
The British forces had intercepted a private letter from Washington to his dentist stating he would not be in Philadelphia any time soon. And though this greatly embarrassed the general, it also convinced the British that his troops would be staying in the North. They were, therefore, completely caught off guard when Washington and his army arrived in Yorktown, Virginia.Mount Vernon Ladies' Association
Next, check out the weirdest fashion trends in history. Or, find out which fashion trend caused Victorian women to have to be carried to the beach.