Melania Trump, 52, is talking out in opposition to Anna Wintour and her Vogue empire, in her newest interview. The previous First Girl referred to as the editor-in-chief “biased” when requested what she considered not being requested to be on the duvet of the favored vogue journal, though different first women and political figures, like Jill Biden, Kamala Harris, and Michelle Obama, have posed for the outlet. The remark got here when she sat down with Pete Hegseth for Fox Nation, in her first interview since leaving the White Home in Jan. 2021.
“They’re biased and so they have likes and dislikes, and it’s so apparent,” Melania stated about not having the chance to be on the duvet of Vogue. “And I believe American folks and everybody sees it. It was their choice, and I’ve far more essential issues to do — and I did within the White Home — than being on the duvet of Vogue.”
Melania’s feedback about Vogue come 9 months after present first girl, Jill, was featured on the duvet of the journal’s Aug. 2021 challenge. Though the spouse of Donald Trump didn’t seem on the duvet throughout trump’s presidency, she did seem on it in Feb. 2005, shortly after marrying the businessman. The sweetness posed in her wedding ceremony gown for the eye-catching photographs
Melania isn’t the one Republican first girl who hasn’t appeared on the duvet of Vogue throughout their time in workplace. Laura Bush, Barbara Bush, and Nancy Reagan had been all photographed for the favored journal at one level, however not once they had been first women, Fox Information talked about. It’s unclear if these girls really feel the identical means Melania feels.
Earlier than Melania referred to as Anna “biased,” the British journalist appeared to throw her personal shade on the former mannequin throughout an interview in 2019. When interviewer Anne McElvoy of the The Economist Asks podcast requested for her ideas on the style of then First Girl Melania, she modified the topic and boasted about Michelle as a substitute. “I believe first girl Michelle Obama actually was so unimaginable,” Anna responded. “In each choice she made about vogue. She supported younger American designers, she supported designers certainly from all around the world. She was the very best ambassador that this nation might probably have in some ways means past vogue.”