Source:
https://scmp.com/news/world/europe/article/2088172/bespoke-suits-baggy-sweaters-french-presidential-hopefuls-weave
World/ Europe

From bespoke suits to baggy sweaters, French candidates’ wardrobes weave powerful messages

Do voters judge a book by its cover? France’s presidential candidates certainly think they do, and more than ever are trying to get their political message across through their wardrobes.

With unemployment and economic woes topping voter concerns ahead of France’s two-round April 23-May 7 presidential vote, candidates have vied for the most on-message branding.

Centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron wears suits that cost about 350 (US$370) from a small Parisian retailer. Whether political calculation or lucky coincidence, the move nicely contrasts with scandal-hit conservative candidate Francois Fillon, accused of elitism for exorbitantly priced suits paid for by donors, including 13,000 for two recent suits.

Far-right candidate Marine Le Pen favours sombre suits as she evokes threats against France and takes a hard line on security and immigration.

On the other end of the political spectrum, far-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon cultivates a tie-free image in an election shaped by anti-establishment sentiment – and jackets that evoke communist leaders.
Philippe Poutou of Anti-Capitalist Party (NPA) dressed down for a prime-time televised debate for the French presidential candidates on April 4. Photo: reuters
Philippe Poutou of Anti-Capitalist Party (NPA) dressed down for a prime-time televised debate for the French presidential candidates on April 4. Photo: reuters

And car factory worker Philippe Poutou, a far-left candidate who took just five weeks off work to run for president, stole the show at the last presidential debate with his messy hair, baggy sweater and sharp tongue that made him look like an “Average Joe” speaking truth to power.

Striking the right visual tone is especially crucial in France, capital of the cosmetic and fashion industries, and whose Parisian salons have set global style trends for centuries. Twitter, Instagram and other social media make a good presidential image more important than ever.

Fillon, 63, took a major blow in the polls over accusations of corruption that were aggravated by a report that he allegedly accepted gifts of designer Berluti suits worth more than 48,000 that fuelled perceptions he was out of touch with ordinary French voters, many of whom are struggling. The website of Left Bank suitmaker Berluti – formerly known as Arnys – calls those who wear its bespoke tailoring “an exclusive club of insiders.”

Fillon denies the corruption charges but his image has suffered anyway.
A woman walks past sign in a shop front in Paris reading “you have a friend? we have the suits”, a play on the scandal surrounding presidential candidate Francois Fillon and his designer wardrobe, paid for by a rich donor. Photo: AFP
A woman walks past sign in a shop front in Paris reading “you have a friend? we have the suits”, a play on the scandal surrounding presidential candidate Francois Fillon and his designer wardrobe, paid for by a rich donor. Photo: AFP

“Fillon’s problems can be all summed up by his suits. He built a campaign around honesty and keeping scandals out of politics ... he became exactly the image of the thing he was fighting,” said political image consultant Frank Tapiro.

Style consultant Emery Dolige agreed, calling the impact of Fillon’s extravagant suits “catastrophic in the countryside and poorer areas.”

Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon has also suffered image problems. The 49-year-old provoked online jabs for saying he often misplaces his spectacles, then appeared to forget to remove his reading glasses after reading a text during the first presidential debate. His glasses have spawned their own Twitter account.

Commentators speculated that Hamon utilised his glasses to project a down-to-earth image like an endearing, absent-minded teacher – but it backfired.
Jean-Luc Melenchon, candidate for the far-left coalition La France Insoumise, in the worker’s jacket he bought from a shop that sells professional uniforms, in keeping with his man-of-the-people image. Photo: EPA
Jean-Luc Melenchon, candidate for the far-left coalition La France Insoumise, in the worker’s jacket he bought from a shop that sells professional uniforms, in keeping with his man-of-the-people image. Photo: EPA

“He’s always forgetting his glasses on his face. It’s subliminal, but people read this as meaning he’s not prepared to be president. You get the impression he’s lost,” said Tapiro. “We invented style in France. If you don’t have a look of a president, you can’t be president.”

The telegenic Macron – at 39 the youngest of the candidates – has made much of his presentational style. Jean-Claude Touboul, co-owner of Jonas et Companie tailors, said the centrist front runner has been a client for three years and regularly buys suits from the store in a dusty, multicultural area of Paris.

“We’re not [luxury-lined] Avenue Montaigne. Our suits cost between 340-380. Is it a political calculation? I don’t know,” Touboul said. “Macron appreciates our cuts, which are a little fitted but not excessively and emphasise his youth.”

Le Pen has dramatically softened her party’s image since taking over from her hardline father in 2011. But for this race, in which her major competitors are men, she has cut her blond hair and donned dark menswear-style suits. That contrasts sharply with the only other woman to be a top presidential contender in France, Segolene Royal, who wore bright feminine colours in her 2007 campaign.

Le Pen “has a conservative, masculine style to align with the attributes of authority and firmness,” said image consultant Valeria Doustaly.

Le Pen favours navy blue, which is called “bleu marine” in French – the name of her political movement, a wordplay on her first name and the colour long associated with conservatives in France.

Far-leftist Melenchon, 65, is especially crafty with branding.

“The jacket he wears in all media opportunities is a worker’s jacket that he bought from a shop that sells professional uniforms,” said Dolige, referring to Melenchon’s jacket with large collar, big buttons and pockets on the outside.

The outfit has drawn comparisons to Communist leaders Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong.