Party Wear

HYDERABAD: Campaigning, clearly, requires a separate wardrobe And there branded wear is quickly cast off for aam aadmi’s plain garb. If Priyanka Gandhi campaigned in Amethi and Rae Bareli in c
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HYDERABAD: Campaigning, clearly, requires a separate wardrobe And there branded wear is quickly cast off for aam aadmi’s plain garb. If Priyanka Gandhi campaigned in Amethi and Rae Bareli in cotton saris and kolhapuri chappals, she was togged out in a fitting top and formal black trousers to cast her vote in Delhi.

Politicians’ unwritten dress code tilts towards the traditional in poll time — the kurta and the sari that help them to seamlessly blend with the masses — even though they are quite comfortable in westernwear for an evening out.

Congress MP Rahul Gandhi is often spotted in a white linen shirt and fawn pants on a night out in Delhi, but his electiontour wardrobe has been restricted to pristinewhite kurta-pyjamas.

The others in the babalog brigade, Milind Deora, Naveen Jindal and Sachin Pilot, too are nattily turned out in designerwear for social occasions, but prefer the Indian look for political rallies.

Shallu Jindal has returned from her husband Naveen’s constituency Kurukshetra after campaigning for two weeks. She left behind her party attire of dresses and branded jeans and went for rallies usually clad in a salwar-kameez or a sari. “It would be odd to be the only person in pants in Kurukshetra. I’m a Kuchipudi dancer and I’m very comfortable in a sari,” says Shallu, who is off to a quick trip to South America before Counting Day. If another generation of politicians — like Lalu Prasad, Mulayam Singh Yadav, J Jayalalithaa or even Sonia Gandhi — sticks to one wardrobe, one image, all through their political lifespan, the new generation that is brought up on changing dress codes knows how to flaunt one look for parties and quite another for party meetings.

And they also know that Sarah Palinesque extravaganza just wouldn’t cut here.

Anas Baqai, secretary of the Congress candidate from Moradabad Mohammed Azharuddin, says that while the former cricketer switches between jeans-tees-glares and kurta-pyjamas on the campaign trail, wife Sangeeta Bijlani has ditched her party threads for salwar-kameez, with just over-sized sunglasses as a fashion statement. “There are many villages in his constituency with a largely conservative population. She has to fit into the traditional look of the wife. Jeans won’t do, salwar kameez will. When required, she even covers her head,” says Baqai. What about the sari? “Oh no,” he exclaims. “She wouldn’t be able to walk fast enough in a sari.”  

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