Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart Wears Same Suit To Every Meeting For 15 Months As Social Experiment

The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2016 11:11 AM
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — A Coquitlam, B.C., mayor wore the same suit to every council meeting for more than a year, and nobody noticed.
     
    Richard Stewart revealed his social experiment on Sunday in a Facebook post.
     
    "I went into my closet and picked out a plain, off-the-rack, boring, dark blue suit. I decided that I'd wear that suit to every Council meeting until someone noticed, until someone commented on it. I told nobody," wrote the Vancouver-area mayor.
     
    "Over 15 months, nobody had noticed how limited my wardrobe was."
     
    Stewart said his objective was to learn first-hand about the double standards around dressing for men and women.
     
    "Of course, I can't imagine anybody suggesting that a woman could get away with wearing the same outfit for more than a year," he wrote. "But clearly a man could, and did."
     
    Stewart said his experiment was prompted in part by a female politician who told him she would face criticism if caught wearing the same outfit twice in a week.
     
     
    He had also read an article about an Australian newscaster who demonstrated "sexist attitudes that prevail in our society" by wearing the same clothing for a year. The anchor, Karl Stefanovic, had lamented that his female co-host gets regular emails and criticisms over her clothing, Stewart said.
     
    "There are double standards in so many aspects of our lives, a different standard for men than for women," he wrote. "Where this different standard presents a barrier, where this limits the advancement of one group over another, where this prevents our democratic institutions from better reflecting society, we need to remove it."
     
    The mayor decided to conclude his test last week, but not because someone figured out what he was up to.
     
    A city councillor joked that Stewart didn't "get the memo" on a day the mayor was still sporting the same blue suit, while three councillors incidentally happened to don grey.
     
    "Let's not elect our representatives because of the clothes they stand in, but because of what they stand for," Stewart wrote.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Weather, Google Get Credit For Newfoundland's Star Turn In Robert Redford Catalogue

    Weather, Google Get Credit For Newfoundland's Star Turn In Robert Redford Catalogue
    Newfoundland is now the undisputed star of a new catalogue distributed to millions of homes worldwide, thanks entirely to its chilly nature — and a random Google search by its creative director.

    Weather, Google Get Credit For Newfoundland's Star Turn In Robert Redford Catalogue

    Most Canadians Drink Alcohol But May Not Know Health Risks: Country's Top Doctor

    Most Canadians Drink Alcohol But May Not Know Health Risks: Country's Top Doctor
    The country's chief public health officer has tabled a report to Parliament on alcohol consumption by Canadians, which warns of the potential health risks from even low levels of drinking.

    Most Canadians Drink Alcohol But May Not Know Health Risks: Country's Top Doctor

    Oil Price Drops Below US$30, Bringing Down Loonie And Toronto Stock Market

    Oil Price Drops Below US$30, Bringing Down Loonie And Toronto Stock Market
    The March contract for benchmark U.S. crude fell US$1.74 to US$29.88 a barrel. Crude has lost nearly US$4 over two days, roiling markets worldwide.

    Oil Price Drops Below US$30, Bringing Down Loonie And Toronto Stock Market

    U.S. Giant Lowe's To Buy Rona In Deal That Would Shake Up Home Improvement Sector

    U.S. Giant Lowe's To Buy Rona In Deal That Would Shake Up Home Improvement Sector
    MONTREAL — U.S. giant Lowe's has proposed to buy Rona in a $3.2-billion friendly deal that would shake up Canada's home improvement industry.

    U.S. Giant Lowe's To Buy Rona In Deal That Would Shake Up Home Improvement Sector

    Alberta Health Stocks Walk-in Clinics With Anti-Fentanyl Kits

    Alberta Health Stocks Walk-in Clinics With Anti-Fentanyl Kits
    Naloxone kits buy a user time to seek potentially life-saving medical treatment.

    Alberta Health Stocks Walk-in Clinics With Anti-Fentanyl Kits

    Animal Advocates Credit Spike In Cruelty Complaints To A More Proactive Public

    The BC SPCA's Marcie Moriarty says investigators responded to 10,205 complaints in 2015, up drastically from 8,850 the year earlier.

    Animal Advocates Credit Spike In Cruelty Complaints To A More Proactive Public