Harris vs. Trump: What Fashion’s Future Looks Like Under the Next President

In presidential politics, the elections get the buzz, but it’s the policies that have the bite.

And Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have very different visions for America that, depending on who wins at the ballot box, will translate into important regulatory differences for the fashion industry.

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Designers and the retail and apparel industry generally lean toward Harris and the Democrats with their political donations, according to data from the Federal Elections Commission.

But from a policy perspective, experts see a nuanced picture with some sharp differences between the two candidates on areas important to fashion, from corporate taxes to workplace rules to antitrust enforcement.

And on trade, which is vital to the global fashion supply chain, the rhetoric from each side is very different — with Trump, for instance, promising tariffs of 100 percent or more on certain goods, harkening back to the various trade wars he started while in office. On the other hand, the Biden administration has voiced a more measured stance although it has retained the Trump-era tariffs on China.

But rhetoric aside, lobbyists for importers still see too many trade similarities between the two sides’ on the ground policy positions.

“You’ve got a choice between tepid and terrifying,” said Stephen Lamar, American Apparel & Footwear Association, speaking about how both Democrats and Republicans have embraced tariffs.

David French, executive vice president of government relations at the National Retail Federation, said: “I wish there was more distinction between the two parties on trade. Donald Trump has never met a tariff he doesn’t love. What Donald Trump has done is make it okay to be as pro tariff as the unions want. So because there’s no political opposition in the system to tariffs, because both parties have effectively consented to a high tariff economic policy, we’re stuck in a policy rut and voters aren’t being given a choice.”

While circumstances will dictate how a President Trump or President Harris weigh in on any particular issue, both are seen at least somewhat as known quantities in the fashion equation.

“In effect, both of these folks are incumbents,” French said. “I know Vice President Harris is only a vice president, but she comes out of the Biden administration. So we have a pretty good indication of what kind of policy direction she’s going to inherit from President Biden’s agenda. At least so far, we’re not seeing marked departures from some of those directions.”