Susan Collins jokes she’ll ‘wear a bikini’ in protest of ‘Fetterman Rule’

Is it the Senate or a giant beach party?

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) joked that she will don a bathing suit for Senate votes while roasting the recent loosening of the chamber’s dress code in deference to Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.).

“I plan to wear a bikini tomorrow to the Senate floor and Chris Coons is gonna wear shorts because there’s no dress code anymore,” Collins, 70, quipped to reporters Monday, referring to her Democratic colleague from Delaware.

“Obviously, I’m not going to wear a bikini,” she then clarified. “But the fact is, as I understand it, I could!”

Collins was voicing her disdain for the more lax dress requirements for senators announced on Sunday, which she decried as a move that “debases the institution.”


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Sen. Susan Collins joined many of her Republican peers in slamming the recent dress code change.
Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA

Susan Collins
The Maine senator often refrains from jumping into the latest political food fights, but opined on the dress code row.
AP

“I think there is a certain dignity that we should be maintaining in the Senate, and to do away with the dress code, to me, debases the institution,” she added, per the Washington Examiner.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) confirmed the change Sunday, which has been dubbed the “Fetterman Rule” by critics.

Schumer noted that he personally will stick to the classic suit and tie previously required of male senators — and still required for staffers.


John Fetterman
John Fetterman has worn a suit before — when forced.
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As a result, Fetterman will no longer have to shout “Aye” or “Nay” from the doorway to the chamber.

Instead he can wear his signature baggy T-shirts or hoodies and giant shorts on the Senate floor in full view of the clerk and C-SPAN cameras.

Fetterman had almost entirely abandoned any efforts to adhere to the dress code after he was released from a local hospital following a battle with clinical depression earlier this year.


John Fetterman
CSPAN cameras could be about to capture a lot more giant shorts and saggy hoodies in the US Capitol.
AP

John Fetterman
John Fetterman has sought to cast himself as an average middle-class person.
AP

Republicans dogpiled on Fetterman over the change, prompting him to go into full troll mode on social media.

“I figure if I take up vaping and grabbing the hog during a live musical, they’ll make me a folk hero,” Fetterman posted Tuesday morning on X, formerly Twitter.

His dig at Rep. Lauren Boebert’s (R-Colo.) groping escapade earlier this month at a “Beetlejuice” performance was posted from his official Senate account, as were many of his other retorts.

Not all Republicans ripped the decision. Collins’ fellow moderate Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) appeared fine with it.

“I’m not so hung up on things to think that every single day a man needs to wear a necktie. If I had my way, we would have summer casual for men so we didn’t have the air conditioning so low and spend so much money keeping this place cold,” Murkowski told reporters.

Fetterman has been known to break out the snappy business suit on occasion, such as when he was sworn into the upper chamber earlier this year.


Sen. Susan Collins
Sen. Susan Collins lamented “there’s no dress code anymore.”
Getty Images

The Pennsylvania senator has sought to exude a blue-collar, working-class vibe, despite his privileged background.

Other members of the Senate have sported casual clothes around the Capitol in the past, most notably while hustling to votes from the building’s gym.