House Speaker Paul Ryan announced Thursday thatthe House dress code will be "modernized"following recent uproar after several female reporters dressed in sleeveless clothes and open-toed shoes were turned away from the Speaker's lobby, a chamber in the House where reporters often interview congressmembers."It came to my attention that there was an issue about dress code," Ryan beganwith a chuckle during his weekly press conference on Thursday morning.The speaker defended himself against accusations from some that he was involved in crafting the conservative code."The sergeant-at-arms was simply enforcing the same interpretation of the rules as under my predecessors ' this is nothing new and certainly not somethingthat I devised," Ryansaid.He argued that "decorum" is important in the House, but that the dress code would be updated to reflect modern "appropriate business attire.""Adress code in the chamber and in thelobby makes sense," Ryan said. "But we also don't need tobar otherwise acceptedcontemporary business attire. Look for a change onthat soon."The announcement came the day after Republican Representative Martha McSally denounced the codewhile speaking on the House floor on Wednesday."Before I yield back, I want to point out I'm standing here in my professional attire, which happens to be a sleeveless dress and open-toed shoes,"she said.Several female reporters tweeted in recent daysthat they were turned away from the House chamber. While the House floor rules, which also require men to wear ties, havelong been in place, it seems that they have been enforced more consistently this summer.Today I was kicked out of the Speaker's lobby for wearing a sleeveless dressI fought the law and the law won' Haley Byrd (@byrdinator) May 4, 2017Jenna Lifhits, a reporter for the Weekly Standard, attempted to fashion sleeves out of pieces of paper after she was deniedentry tothe House lobby while wearing her sleeveless dress.She was still not allowed in.This is real. Fellow female reporters barred from Speaker's lobby for wearing sleeveless dresses while doing their jobs. (It's hot in DC) ' https://t.co/8evY6wQmA8' K Tully McManus (@ktullymcmanus) July 6, 2017The reports from the womensparked a backlash on Twitter, wheremany on the left accused Ryan of crafting the rules, which they deemed sexist."Liberal reporters on Capitol Hill threw a fit this week over a 'new' and 'sexist' dress code in the House Speaker's lobby," The Blaze, a right-leaning website, wrote. "There was just one problem with their criticism, the formal, traditional dress code isn't new at all."Join the conversation about this storyNOW WATCH: A Harvard mathematician reveals how algorithms are making police and the courts more biased
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