DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The Most Impactful Political Handbag Since Mrs. Thatcher’s

November 18, 2025
in News
The Most Impactful Political Handbag Since Mrs. Thatcher’s

It’s the biggest political handbag since Margaret Thatcher entered 10 Downing Street with her boxy Launer London purse — in all sorts of ways.

“It,” of course, is the black tote carried by Sanae Takaichi, the new prime minister of Japan. Officially called the Grace Delight Tote, but often referred to simply as the Sanae Tote, it is a leather bag large enough to fit an A4 file. A simple rectangle with a neat silver clasp at the top and handles long enough to carry over one shoulder or in the crook of an arm, it is made by Hamano, a Japanese “leather crafts” company founded in 1880. Saori Masuda, the editor of 10 Magazine Japan, called it the “Asprey of Japan,” referring to the heritage London leather goods house beloved of the British aristocracy. It is available in nine different color combinations and retails for 136,400 yen (about $880).

It is, in other words, in no way unusual except for one thing: It is carried by the leader of a G7 country, a job that usually does not involve lugging a handbag.

Before Ms. Takaichi’s election, it was almost impossible to think of a prominent female politician who actually carried a bag. Giorgia Meloni, the first female prime minister of Italy, does not. Claudia Sheinbaum, the first female president of Mexico, does not. Kamala Harris, the first female vice president of the United States, did not. Neither did Angela Merkel during her time in office as the chancellor of Germany.

Ditto Hillary Clinton. Even Liz Truss did not carry a bag during her brief tenure as the British prime minister (though when she met Queen Elizabeth II in Buckingham Palace, the Queen had her own famous bag with her).

As to why, and despite the recent popularity of the BAB (big ass bag) and the recurring desire of designers to put big bags on their runways, the answer is pretty simple: Men in power do not carry briefcases. Why should women?

Forgoing a bag simply telegraphs the impression that you have someone else to do the lifting for you. As Karla Welch, a stylist who worked with Ms. Harris at the beginning of her term, said: “They all have bags. It’s just an aide carrying it.” (The television series “Veep” poked fun at this reality via an assistant to the title character, who was known variously as her “bag man” and her “body man.”)

That’s why, in the final season of “Succession,” one character mocks another’s date for carrying a “ludicrously capacious” handbag to a family gathering. Her large Burberry bag served to symbolize her misunderstanding of the semiology of the rich and powerful, where membership means no one need schlep so much stuff on their own shoulders. Generally, the more important the person, the smaller the bag. Now Ms. Takaichi is changing the calculus.

Emi Kameoka, the fashion director of Vogue Japan, said that Ms. Takaichi’s bag serves to underscore her image as a professional woman and reinforces her campaign promise to “work and work and work and work.” It can hold both files and tablets, and it telegraphs elegance and utility. Indeed, Hamano sells the Grace Delight Tote as the bag that “answers the desires of career-minded women.”

It is also classically Japanese, Ms. Masuda said, with Hamano having been known primarily for supplying the imperial family. And though, as she noted, the company was previously favored by “very conservative, non-fashion-forward women,” Ms. Takaichi’s patronage has brought it to the attention of a new generation of consumers who see her choice of the bag as a gesture of national pride.

Not to mention a through line that connects Ms. Takaichi to her self-professed political hero, Mrs. Thatcher, whose attachment to her own bag gave the world the term “handbagging,” meaning a surprise tongue-lashing. (Ms. Takaichi also has an affinity for blue jackets and pearls, both of which were Thatcher style signatures.)

For Mrs. Thatcher, the handbag was a way of aligning herself with a respectable Everywoman accouterment at a time when part of the country was uncomfortable with the idea of a woman leader and a useful metaphor. Her bag was the kind of bag, British Vogue declared, carried by “a sensible, well-put-together person, reflective of an organised mind.”

But that’s not all it was.

Edwina Currie, a Conservative member of Parliament and health minister for Mrs. Thatcher, called the bag the prime minister’s “weapon.” Mrs. Thatcher herself referred to it as the only “leak proof” place in her government. In 2013, Cynthia Crawford, her onetime personal assistant, wrote a piece in the Guardian noting that “anything that was highly secretive or precious, we would put in her handbag because we knew she was never parted from it.”

The bag became such an effective shorthand for the woman who owned it that in 1988, during Mrs. Thatcher’s final state visit with Ronald Reagan, George Schultz, then secretary of state, gave her a replica of her bag to mark her entry into what he called “the Grand Order of the Handbag.” In 2011, an Asprey bag she carried during an earlier visit sold for $39,800 at a charity auction. By the time she left office, the bags had become, according to the Margaret Thatcher Center, “potent symbols of her unyielding authority.”

Whether Ms. Takaichi’s bag will have the same staying power, influence and historical resonance remains to be seen. But it has already inspired a spike in sales, as well as numerous breathless reports about a “nationwide craze” and “viral sensation.”

“People are paying attention to what she is wearing, much more than they did for male politicians,” Ms. Kameoka of Vogue said. And this particular accessory is, by dint of its size, impossible to miss.

Indeed, according to the Hamano website, the company has had so many requests for the black Grace Delight Tote that its current production run is sold out, and the company is “currently receiving orders equivalent to approximately 10 months’ worth of factory production.”

Hamano currently plans to ship the bag at the end of August next year.

Vanessa Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times since 2014.

The post The Most Impactful Political Handbag Since Mrs. Thatcher’s appeared first on New York Times.

CNN’s Erin Burnett Cuts Off Republican in Heated Epstein Interview
News

CNN’s Erin Burnett Cuts Off Republican in Heated Epstein Interview

November 18, 2025

CNN anchor Erin Burnett cut off Rep. Nancy Mace during a heated on-air clash over President Donald Trump’s stance on ...

Read more
News

The Trump administration’s math on economic policy doesn’t add up

November 18, 2025
News

This is ‘real reason’ that proves Trump is ‘faking’ Epstein U-turn: strategist

November 18, 2025
News

What We Lose by Letting AI Speak for Us

November 18, 2025
News

What If ‘America First’ Appears to Work?

November 18, 2025
3 ways schools can teach students to shape AI — not just survive it, Oxford professor says

3 ways schools can teach students to shape AI — not just survive it, Oxford professor says

November 18, 2025

4 Clever Tricks That Make It Worth Switching to Proton Mail

November 18, 2025

A California sex ‘cult’ became a Netflix hit. This new book unpacks even darker secrets

November 18, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025