In Trump's Orbit, Women Aren't the Only Ones Concerned About Their Looks [View all]
The New York Times
@nytimes.com
Vanity among male politicians is nothing new. For the men of the Trump administration, however, the concentration on their appearance is a constant.
In Trumps Orbit, Women Arent the Only Ones Concerned About Their Looks
In Trump world, the male ego is often evident and their appearance scrutinized under a presidents gaze.
nyti.ms
4:00 PM · Apr 19, 2026
Vanity among male politicians is nothing new. For the men of the Trump administration, however, the concentration on their appearance is a constant.
— The New York Times (@nytimes.com) 2026-04-19T20:00:07.892365Z
In Trumps Orbit, Women Arent the Only Ones Concerned About Their Looks
In Trump world, the male ego is often evident and their appearance scrutinized under a presidents gaze.

For all the talk about Mar-a-Lago-inspired cosmetic surgery for women in Trumps world, the attention paid to, and the efforts to safeguard, the male ego also stand out. Many of the men in his administration have adopted a signature look. Doug Mills/The New York Times
By Jesse McKinley
April 18, 2026
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For all the talk about Mar-a-Lago-inspired cosmetic surgery for women in the Trump orbit, the attention paid to, and efforts to safeguard, the male ego also stand out. ... Its constant attempts at trying to cultivate a persona that in their eyes seems strong and powerful and dominant and stoic, said Zac Seidler, a clinical psychologist and the global director of research at Movember, a mens health charity. But once you scratch the surface of that, all you see is fragility.
{snip}
The focus on looks could be seen as part of a larger trend with men particularly younger men including ideas like looksmaxxing (trying to amplify ones good looks, with surgery and other methods) and mogging (dominating another male in appearance), which are steadily percolating through the so-called manosphere.
Whatever the case, Mr. Trumps interest in outward images has been adopted and echoed by his staff, said Dan Cassino, a professor of government and politics at Fairleigh Dickinson University, who has studied the presidents approach to masculinity.
Men in the Trump administration are performing a very specific type of masculinity in order to try and appeal to Trump, Mr. Cassino said. ... Of course, women in the workplace have been accustomed to and concerned about comments and judgments about their looks. ... Now, it seems, men are, too.
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Jesse McKinley is a Times reporter covering politics, pop culture, lifestyle and the confluence of all three.