Anna Wintour dodges questions about Melania Trump's style, praises Michelle Obama instead

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 05:  (L-R) First Lady of the United States Michelle Obama, Vogue Editor in Chief Anna Wintour and Metropolitan Museum of Art President Emily K. Rafferty attend the Anna Wintour Costume Center Grand Opening at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 5, 2014 in New York City.  (Photo by Paul Zimmerman/WireImage)
Vogue's Anna Wintour preferred to discuss Michelle Obama (pictured with her in 2014) over current FLOTUS Melania Trump. (Photo: Paul Zimmerman/WireImage)

Trump supporters have frequently complained that Melania Trump has been snubbed by Vogue , which has thus far avoided featuring her in a fashion feature since she’s become first lady. A new interview with the woman at the fashion tome’s helm, Anna Wintour, may only add more fuel to the fire.

Though the Slovenian former model graced a 2005 cover in her wedding dress after marrying future president Donald Trump, she’s yet to enjoy the three cover turns of her predecessor, Michelle Obama. And it’s the former first lady who Wintour preferred to discuss in a new interview for The Economist’s podcast released this past week.

Speaking to interviewer Anne McElvoy, the British editor-in-chief dodged questions about Mrs. Trump’s flair for fashion, choosing to instead hail Obama as “the best ambassador this country could possibly have in many ways, obviously, way beyond fashion.”

Despite being asked about Trump’s wardrobe during her recent visit to the U.K., Wintour gushed about Obama.

“I think first lady Michelle Obama really was so incredible in every decision she made about fashion,” she responded. “She supported young American designers. She supported designers, indeed, from all over the world. She was the best ambassador this country could possibly have in many ways, obviously, way beyond fashion.”

US First Lady Melania Trump walks through 453 American flags, each representing a child in foster care in Cabell County, West Virginia, many due to the opioid epidemic, at Ritter Park in Huntington, West Virginia, July 8, 2019. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)        (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)
Wintour declined to address Melania Trump's wardrobe. (Photo: SAUL LOEB / AFP)

“But she’s not the first lady now,” McElvoy pressed. “So what about the one you’ve got now?”

“To me she [Obama] is the example that I admire,” Wintour said.

And when asked if she’d ever help President Trump with fashion advice, she said only, “I think he’s unlikely to call.”

Wintour’s icing-out of the Trumps didn’t go unnoticed by listeners.

Trump supporters may not be so thrilled, however. In April, after Wintour hinted to CNN that she would “take a stand” by not giving the new FLOTUS a cover, then-spokeswoman and new White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham shot back with a testy statement.

“To be on the cover of Vogue doesn’t define Mrs. Trump, she’s been there, done that long before she was first lady,” Grisham said.

“Her role as first lady of the United States and all that she does is much more important than some superficial photo shoot and cover,” she added. “This just further demonstrates how biased the fashion magazine industry is, and shows how insecure and small-minded Anna Wintour really is.”

Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle:

Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day.