- Multiple dustups during the nascent months of President Donald Trump’s second term, involving the attire of Elon Musk and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, have resulted from men asserting superiority over one another by questioning each other’s suits, or lack thereof.
Elon Musk and Volodymyr Zelensky are the latest to be targeted for under-dressing, one of President Donald Trump's long-held pet peeves.
14:50 JST, March 12, 2025
- Where there’s one, there are more.
- In cities, whole neighborhoods are defined by the besuited business people who bustle through them during the daytime hours.
Suits, in other words, have long been a powerful visual symbol of belonging to a particular class. And although workplace trends and the coronavirus pandemic have made suits a slightly rarer sight in many American offices in recent years, their status as an in-group signifier has found a new flock of defenders: the Trump administration.
- In late February, Trump welcomed Zelensky to the White House with a remark about his clothes right off the bat: “You’re all dressed up today. … He’s all dressed up today,” Trump said sarcastically, turning to photographers as he shook hands with Zelensky.
- Zelensky has explained that he wears tactical, military-style dress to show solidarity with Ukrainian armed forces, and will do so until Ukraine’s war with Russia is over.
Later that day, reporter Brian Glenn – a staffer at the right-wing cable channel Real America’s Voice, as well as the boyfriend of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) – asked Zelensky during a meeting with Trump why he hadn’t worn a suit to the White House.
The meeting had already turned from calm to confrontational when Trump and Vice President JD Vance accused Zelensky of being insufficiently grateful for U.S. support in the war against Russia, and Zelensky urged them to understand that Russian President Vladimir Putin was untrustworthy in matters of diplomacy.
- “Maybe something like yours, yes.
- Maybe something better.
- I don’t know.
- We will see.
- Maybe something cheaper.”
- Do you not know how to dress correctly?
- Or are you just too poor?
- And with his retort about his plans to wear a better and cheaper suit than Glenn’s, Zelensky made an unspoken assertion of his own:
- Amid growing concern that the tech mogul is wielding an unprecedented and dangerous amount of power at the U.S. DOGE Service (he has been jeeringly labeled the “co-president”), Trump took a jab at his habit of showing up at the White House in T-shirts and baseball caps in a joint interview on Fox in February.
“He’s got some very brilliant young people working for him that dress much worse than him, actually,” Trump said of Musk’s work at DOGE.
“They dress in just T-shirts. You wouldn’t know they have a 180 IQ.”
That Saturday, Colin Jost joked on “Saturday Night Live,” “It’s a refreshing reminder that bullying still works.”
- In 2022, he put the notoriously relaxed hoodie-and-shorts uniform of then-Lt. Gov. John Fetterman on blast at a rally in Pennsylvania, where Fetterman was running for Senate against longtime Trump ally Mehmet Oz.
“This guy is a disaster.
He comes in with a sweatsuit on – I’ve never seen him wear a suit!
A dirty, dirty, dirty sweatsuit.
It’s really disgusting,” Trump said, as he compared Fetterman’s dress to “a teenager getting high in his parents’ basement.”
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