Jill Biden graced the Vogue cover for the second time, but many were seemingly not happy about it.

Vogue featured the first lady on its cover again for its August 2024 issue. However, several netizens aired their sentiments about Jill's newest cover. They called the magazine "biased" for featuring the current first lady multiple times, but not the ex-FLOTUS, Melania Trump.

Melania Trump
U.S. First Lady Melania Trump arrives at a roundtable on sickle cell disease in the State Dining Room of the White House on September 14, 2020 in Washington, DC. Alex Wong/Getty Images

"Vogue's Jill Biden cover post-debate is tone-deaf. Glorifying a failing presidency instead of addressing real issues. Why never Melania? Liberal media bias undermines trust," one commented.

"OMG, VOGUE! Not once featured our most elegant and beautiful 1st Lady, Melania! Your WOKE bias is sickening! Your Michelle features -- calling her our next Jackie Kennedy! Really? She came bouncing down the stairs in cutoffs & size 11 sneakers! Shame on you! You lost credibility," a different user opined.

Donald and Melania Trump
U.S. President Donald Trump (L) and first lady Melania Trump thank guests during the inaugural Armed Forces Ball at the National Building Museum January 20, 2017 in Washington, DC. The ball is part of the celebrations following Trump's inauguration. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

"That speaks more to the bias of Vogue than anything else. Melania was a world-class model before she ever met Donald Trump, and still has more style and class in one well-manicured finger than Jill Biden has EVER had," a third person remarked.

"So Vogue puts an elderly First Lady with average looks on its cover...but never puts the Former First Lady, an ex Super Model, on the cover. No bias evident here! Snark!" a fourth commenter said.

Melania herself once called Vogue "biased." In an interview on "FOX & Friends Weekend," co-host Pete Hegseth asked the former first lady about her feelings when Jill scored a cover for Vogue five months into her husband Jill Biden's presidency. Former first ladies Michelle Obama, who appeared on the magazine cover three times, and Hillary Clinton were also featured in the magazine. However, Vogue snubbed her despite her modeling background and looks.

"Yet with your business background and your fashion background and your beauty, never on the cover of Vogue. Why the double standard?" Hegseth asked Melania.

"They're biased," Donald Trump's wife replied. "And they have likes and dislikes and it's so obvious. And I think American people and everyone see it. It was their decision, and I have much more important things to do and I did in the White House than being on the cover of Vogue."

Despite the backlash, Jill's supporters were enthusiastic about her recent magazine cover.

"I love that First Lady Dr. Jill Biden made it on the cover of Vogue and Stormy Daniels made it into a Vogue photo shoot in 2018," one fan wrote.

"Queen Jill," another supporter commented.

A third person remarked, "Beautiful, classy, loving, supportive @FLOTUS."

"Because Vogue knows the difference between class (Biden, [[Bush], Clinton, Carter, Kennedy, Ford, etc) & trash Melania DUMPY! Nude prostitute escorts need not apply! -- that's Melania!" a different commenter wrote.

Jill first graced the Vogue magazine for its August 2021 issue. The recent cover is technically her third because she also appeared in front of the November 2022 issue when Hunter Biden's daughter, Naomi Bien, was married at the White House, the Washington Post reported.

U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden welcome Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese and his partner Jodie Haydon to the White House on Oct. 25, 2023 in Washington, DC. Getty Images/Drew Angerer
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Melania trump, Vogue, Jill biden