POLITICIANS and their clothes can never be separated from politics. It is the side plot which moves along with the main story — scene to scene, act to act — from Gandhi and his homespun clothes to Mohammad Ali Jinnah whose transition to the Quaid-i-Azam was accompanied by the adoption of the sherwani and karakuli hat, over his famed Savile Row suits. In the recent US election, Kamala Harris’ clothes and jewellery came in for scrutiny as did Melania Trump’s expensive elegance.

The discussion of any woman’s appearance in the political sphere brings up the inevitable reference to Angela Merkel, who stuck to her signature uniform look. But where the general assumption is that attire is an individual choice it is not necessarily true. Especially in our part of the world, where leaders themselves embody the political party they lead.

In fact, it can safely be said that politicians’ appearance also reflects the larger political culture of the party they head. Consider the PPP, Pakistan’s first truly popular party. Even those who did not witness those times have heard about the awami suit popularised by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto or the shalwar kameez he donned, exchanging it for his stylish Western suits that he was obviously comfortable with in his previous avatar.

Such is the power of politics and optics. His daughter continued the trend. From her clothes to decisions about her personal life — it was all motivated by the political life Benazir Bhutto had chosen to lead as.