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Meryl Streep Criticizes Melania Trump’s Fashion Choice in Vogue Cover Interview with Anna Wintour

 

What began as a conversation about fashion quickly turned into something far sharper when Meryl Streep revisited one of Melania Trump’s most controversial public style moments — and made it clear she saw it as far more than a wardrobe choice. In a new Vogue interview with Anna Wintour, the discussion moved from personal style and public identity to the image that still lingers years later: Melania’s 2018 jacket bearing the words, “I Really Don’t Care, Do U?”

The exchange started lightly enough. Wintour praised women whose style feels authentically their own, including Michelle Obama and New York City first lady Rama Duwaji, before adding that Melania Trump also “always looks like herself when she dresses.” But Streep didn’t leave it there. She pointed directly to the jacket Melania wore during her visit to a shelter housing migrant children and called it the most powerful message the first lady had sent. Streep said the moment was “destabilizing,” suggesting that clothing, especially in politics, can never be separated from the message it carries.



That jacket, of course, had already sparked global outrage when Melania wore it in June 2018 on the way to visit migrant children near the U.S.-Mexico border. At the time, the image spread instantly, and criticism focused not just on the slogan itself, but on the brutal timing of it. Later, Melania said the jacket was indeed meant as a message — not to the children, but to her critics — and said she wanted people to focus on what she was doing rather than what she was wearing.

For Streep, though, the problem seemed to run much deeper than a single fashion controversy. Her comments tied back to a long-standing concern she has expressed about the public performance of cruelty. During her 2017 Golden Globes speech, while accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award, Streep condemned Donald Trump over the 2015 moment when he appeared to mock New York Times reporter Serge Kovaleski, who has arthrogryposis. She said then that when powerful people model humiliation, it spreads outward into public life, giving others permission to do the same.



That older criticism now feels newly connected to the way Streep framed Melania’s jacket in Vogue. The point, she seemed to suggest, was not just that the outfit was offensive, but that it signaled something broader — a public shrug in the face of suffering. In Streep’s view, symbols matter, especially when they come from people whose influence extends far beyond clothes and photographs.



The renewed attention also comes just days after Melania appeared at the White House Easter Egg Roll with Donald Trump, where the first lady once again became the focus of intense online scrutiny. During the event, Trump publicly praised her, calling her a “movie star” in front of the crowd, while photos and video from the South Lawn quickly ignited fresh speculation online about her appearance and demeanor.



What makes Streep’s comments land so strongly is that they don’t treat fashion as superficial. In her telling, style is never just about looking polished or elegant — it can become a statement of indifference, identity, or power. And when the person wearing it is the first lady of the United States, every choice carries more weight than the fabric itself.




So while the jacket may be years old, the reaction to it clearly is not. With one remark, Streep pulled that image back into the spotlight and reminded everyone why it never really disappeared in the first place.

For her, the issue was never just what Melania wore. It was what that moment seemed to say — and how loudly it still echoes.

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