Photo: Imaxtree  
What do fashion month and the primaries have in common?  Other than seeming never-ending, more than you think. Over the last couple of weeks, there’s been a 
battle brewing in the fashion world over the international show dates for the spring  2013 season (which takes place in the fall of 2012).  Just over two  years ago, the leading fashion councils from each of the four fashion  capitols—London, New York, Paris and Milan—met to draft a set calendar  for the coming years.  The first three agree that the calendar was meant  to be in place for years to come while Milan claims it was for three  years only, and is vowing to move up its show dates to overlap with New  York and London’s. If that happens, photographers, editors, models, and  buyers would have to choose who they need to see—and who they are  willing to miss. As the fashion world’s major players play a serious game of “me first,” a  group of power players in a very different world are playing the same  game. If you remember, the 2008 presidential campaign was one of the  longest in history. We painstakingly watched the horse race for nearly two years: Obama’s in New Hampshire; Hillary’s in Iowa;  Those other guys who didn’t have a chance are in South Carolina. Then,  as well as now, the forgotten states complained that New Hampshire and  Iowa got all the glory simply because their primaries were before them.  No fair! Why do they get all the influence and attention that goes with  going first? Why do a bunch of people in a room in Iowa get to set the  standards? This year, as other states threaten to move up their  primaries, New Hampshire’s threatening to move its primaries up to  December—December!—so as to keep its coveted leader-of-the-pack status. And so we find ourselves in the midst of another excruciatingly  drawn-out presidential politics season (do we really need a Republican  debate every week?)—and we can’t even escape into the party-filled  fashion world anymore.