Katrina Szish, a Newsmax host and former Vogue Editor, reveals what we already know. The politics of an unhappy and bitter Editor has kept First Lady Melania Trump from appearing in Vogue Magazine.
Szish joined Meghan McCainโs podcast to share that Vogue Editor Anna Wintourโs โdeep political biasโ has kept the most stylish First Lady in history from appearing on the cover.
Meghan McCain: I want to ask you just a question on the background of Vogue. So I am like, I like dabble in fashion. I love fashion. I dabble in fashion, but I wouldnโt call myself a fashionista because when it gets right down to it, I donโt find fashion very natural. I need people to help me.
But I do know when I see a stylish, beautiful woman like you, whatever you feel about Trump, there is no doubting that our First Lady is easily one of the most stylish women, I think ever, in all of American history, let alone modern American history, it really upsets me that Vogue wonโt put her on a cover. I think Jill got two. Obviously, Vice President Harris definitely had one where she was in Converse, and it looked weird.
What is their hesitation?
Katrina Szish: Michelle Obama, of course. Yeah. You know what it is? I think totally. I mean, This is not even spilling any tea, but Anna Wynter, the Editor-in-Chief of Vogue, she loves politics. Sheโs extraordinarily liberal. And even from when I was there many, many years ago, she doesnโt view the magazine really as journalism. Itโs very much a point of view, and sheโs in charge.
So she puts on the cover who she thinks will sell magazines through her own point of view and, of course, experience.
But sheโs clearly very vocally anti-Trump, very vocally anti-Republican, and itโs just something thatโs her idea.
I think itโs ridiculous, but she makes her own decisions, and she does what she does. I think Melania, to the point of actually being able to showcase designers, many of whom who, because of Annaโs decision to cast her off in the world of fashion, refused to dress her, which, again, I think is so ridiculous because they were, again, silenced by the groupthink mentality of liberals and Democrats, and that even comes through in fashion, as we saw.
I really want to give kudos to Adam Lippis, a small niche American designer who dressed her for the inauguration.Good Iโve met him. Iโve worked with him. Heโs been around for a long time. Heโs not a new guy or an up and comer on the scene, but he said, โYou know what? I want to do this because this is a beautiful woman. This is for the country, not for partisan politics.โ I think itโs great when designers actually are courageous to stand up to that.
Meghan McCain: I was really happy to see Oscar De La Renta doing Usha Vance because she did her inauguration outfit. I think Ivanka because Oscar De La Renta, for people that maybe donโt know that are watching, he is known for doing basically every First Lady in modern history, and I was happy to see that come back. Do you think we can look forward to seeing some designers get less skittish? I mean, maybe they wonโt get a Vogue cover, but I think everyone sees how absurd, patently absurd it is. But do you think more designers will feel less like Like less hesitant to dress people like our second lady and our first lady than they did the first time?
Katrina Szish: Iโll be very honest. Iโve talked to a lot of friends in the industry who are very liberal, a former colleagues at Vogue and other magazine Iโve seen some other designers, American designers, some of whom were very close friends with Ivana Trump and very much love Melania, but they have said point blank, โYeah, sorry, no,โ people are too scared.
They wonโt do it because they are too worried about their own brand, their own reputation, and the bottom line. I think thatโs really disappointing. Iโm not saying across the board thatโs going to be the case, but I donโt think weโre suddenly going to see a dramatic change. I mean, fashion houses like Oscar de la Renta, of course, he doesnโt do the designs anymore, but theyโre historically more about fashion and beauty and the esthetic as they are than politics or even being bullied into dressing or not dressing someone.
But I think itโs very different now with even the retail climate like it is, the luxury climate like it is. Designers are very, very careful who they align themselves with. And unfortunately, I donโt think weโre going to see a big change there.
Meghan McCain: It makes me really sad. I donโt know. I love it. I know.
Katrina Szish: Itโs a bummer, especially like Melanie, as you said, sheโs so fashionable and she looks beautiful in clothing. And also she is someone who isnโt originally from this country, but now sheโs first lady, and that represents an amazing, amazing trajectory, an amazing journey that she has been on. I think sharing her story with readers, say, in Vogue, would be beneficial. But again, I think they view her as, I think it described her as maybe like a movie character or like an action hero starsomething very frivolous, as opposed to a legitimate first lady, which is sad.
Watch:
While the most beautiful and fashionable First Lady in American history is overlooked because of Trump Derangement Syndrome, Vogue has had no problem showcasing washed-up porn star Stormy Daniels, Jill Biden looking like she grabbed fabric from Hunter Bidenโs crack couch, a frumpy Michelle Obama, and a converse-clad Kamala Harris.



The post Former Vogue Editor Admits Liberal Bias Keeps the Most Beautiful First Lady in History From Magazine (Video) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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