Democratic senator from Arizona Kyrsten Sinema leaves the Capitol on May 11, 2020. / Photo by Michael Reynolds/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock.
ONE OF the more colorful creatures in Congress has decided to step aside. Not Mitch McConnell—we said colorful.
No, Arizona senator Kyrsten Sinema announced this week that she would not be running for reelection to the Senate. A Democrat who turned Independent, Sinema flew her freak flag proudly, sporting candy-colored wigs, dresses that sprouted flouncy sleeves, and thigh-high boots.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, and a kiss is still a kiss. But a skin-tight metallic sheath in the halls of Congress? What’s that? Well, don’t ask us. Here’s what the New York Times’s chief fashion critic, Vanessa Friedman, had to say a couple of years ago.
Senator Kyrsten Sinema may have been in Europe recently on a fund-raising trip and out of reach of the activists who have dogged her footsteps, frustrated with her obstruction of President Biden’s social spending bill. But despite the fact her office has been keeping her itinerary under wraps, were those protesters able to follow her overseas, there’s a good chance they would be able to find her.
Not just because of her political theater. Ever since she was sworn in to the Arizona House of Representatives in 2005, Ms. Sinema has always stood out in a crowd. And as Ms. Sinema’s legislative demands take center stage (along with those of Senator Joe Manchin, the other Biden Bill holdout) her history of idiosyncratic outfits has taken on a new cast.
As Tammy Haddad, former MSNBC political director and co-founder of the White House Correspondents Weekend Insider, said of the senator, “If the other members of Congress had paid any attention to her clothing at all they would have known she wasn’t going to just follow the party line.”
The senior senator from Arizona — the first woman to represent Arizona in the Senate, the first Democrat elected to that body from that state since 1995, and the first openly bisexual senator — has never hidden her identity as a maverick. In fact, she’s advertised it. Pretty much every day.
Indeed, it was back in 2013, when she was sworn in to the House of Representatives, that Elle crowned Ms. Sinema “America’s Most Colorful Congresswoman.” Since she joined the Senate, she has merely been further embracing that term. Often literally.
Notice was served at her swearing-in on Jan. 3, 2019, when Ms. Sinema seemed to be channeling Marilyn Monroe in platinum blond curls, a white sleeveless pearl-trimmed top, rose-print pencil skirt and stiletto heels: She was never going to revert to pantsuit-wearing banality.
Great style and chutzpah. Can miss her politics, though.
Happy to read this flattering piece about a true maverick! Thanks for this fun read!
Good for her! Her fashion will be missed, not so sure her politics will…