Senators Dress Up for Seersucker Thursday

It’s become an annual Senate affair.

This year, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana organized the event, complete with social media props like a seersucker picture frame and a cardboard cutout of a seersucker suit for those who missed the style memo and wanted to post pictures under the hashtag #SeersuckerSelfie.

“It's kinda fun, it's bipartisan, it's something that people can participate in and kind of see each other and smile and thumbs up -- it doesn't matter anything else that's going on,” Cassidy told ABC News.

It all started with Sen. Trent Lott, who in 1996 decided to start the tradition of posing with his colleagues in seersucker (and white buck shoes, of course) as a way to prove that, in his words, “the Senate isn’t just a bunch of dour folks wearing dark suits and -- in the case of men -- red or blue ties.”

The tradition also has its roots in Capitol Hill history. In the early 20th century, lawmakers would routinely switch to seersucker in the summer months before Congress had air conditioning.

“It’s that old!” she joked.

“I have to say, I understand why Southerners are in love with seersucker,” Collins continued. “Because it really does breathe, it's cool, it doesn't wrinkle easily. And it is great fabric for the South. It's not something you're going to see me in the coast of Maine very often.”