There is one clear area where President
Donald Trump has had a unifying effect on Capitol Hill: the color
Democratic women wear to joint sessions of
Congress.
The chairwoman of the Democratic Women’s Working Group, Florida Rep. Lois Frankel, is encouraging members to wear white to this year's
State of the Union address as a shoutout to the voters who handed Democrats a majority in the House in the midterm elections and a reminder that they plan to make women's economic security a priority.
The color choice is also meant to honor the women's suffrage movement that led to the ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920.
"By wearing suffragette white to #SOTU2019 tmrw we’re sending a message to everyone that voted for @HouseDemocrats & delivered us the majority that we're working #ForThePeople, promoting the economic security of women & their families!" Frankel said in a tweet Monday.
Democratic women also wore white to Trump's first speech before a joint session of Congress in 2017, about a month after his inauguration and the massive Women's March on Washington. At the time, Frankel said they wore white "to unite against any attempts by the Trump administration to roll back the incredible progress women have made in the last century."
Hillary Clinton also wore white when she accepted the nomination for president at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in honor of the women's suffrage movement. And Geraldine Ferraro wore white when she accepted the nomination to become the first female candidate for vice president for a major American political party at the 1984 Democratic convention.
Last year, Frankel's working group encouraged members of Congress to wear black to Trump's first State of the Union address to express solidarity with the #MeToo movement. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., also said it was meant to send a message to Trump, who himself has been accused of sexual harassment.
"The last couple years we were basically reflecting back to Trump," Frankel told Roll Call. She said this year it was a "much more positive" message, "emphasizing economic security for women and their families."
One big change this year: new House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., will be sitting behind the president as he delivers his address. And Pelosi – the woman who recently went toe-to-toe with Trump in the government showdown – will likely be wearing white.