Which current Muslim members serve on House committees with major policy influence like Ways and Means or Appropriations?

Checked on December 2, 2025
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Executive summary

Four Muslim members serve in the 119th U.S. House of Representatives: André Carson (D‑IN), Ilhan Omar (D‑MN), Rashida Tlaib (D‑MI) and one newly elected member noted in some sources as Lateefah Simon (D‑CA); three of those — Carson, Omar and Tlaib — were reelected in 2024 [1] [2]. Available sources list these Muslim members but do not provide a complete, source-cited inventory of which of them sit on high‑influence House committees such as Ways and Means or Appropriations [3] [1] [2].

1. Who the current Muslim House members are — the baseline

Reporting and compiled lists identify four Muslim members in the 119th Congress, with André Carson, Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib confirmed as reelected incumbents in 2024 and reporting such as Pew noting four Muslim representatives in the new House [2] [1]. Wikipedia’s running list likewise records that as of 2025 four Muslims serve in the House [3]. Source outlets focused on Muslim representation — for example CAIR and IRIC reporting — also list the newly elected or returning Muslim members and note the historic increase to four [4].

2. What you asked: committee assignments matter — and sources are silent

Your question targets membership on specific, high‑power committees (Ways and Means; Appropriations). The documents and news items supplied list who the Muslim members are and track their reelections and historic significance, but none of the provided sources detail the committee rosters or specify which of these Muslim members serve on Ways and Means or Appropriations. Therefore: available sources do not mention which Muslim members sit on Ways and Means or Appropriations [3] [2] [1].

3. Why committee placement matters — quick context

Committees such as Ways and Means and Appropriations directly shape tax, entitlement, spending and budget policy; membership confers institutional influence over revenue and federal outlays. The supplied materials stress the political significance of Muslim representation on the Hill — describing their roles in debates on foreign policy and civil rights — but they stop short of mapping those roles to committee power centers [2] [4] [1]. If assessing influence is your goal, committee assignments are a necessary next data point not present in the current reporting [1].

4. What the supplied reporting does make clear about influence and visibility

Even without committee rosters, the sources show that Muslim members have been visible and influential on policy debates, especially foreign policy concerning Israel and Gaza; re‑election of incumbents such as Omar, Tlaib and Carson is presented as reinforcing their institutional voice [2]. Advocacy and community groups and media coverage frame the increase to four Muslim representatives as a meaningful expansion of political representation [4] [1].

5. Competing perspectives and limitations in the record

The supplied sources present two consistent facts — the count of Muslim members (four) and that three incumbents were reelected — but they diverge on granularity: encyclopedic lists and Pew provide numbers and demographics, while news pieces emphasize electoral outcomes and political narratives [3] [1] [2]. None of the provided sources include a House committee roster that would answer your precise question; that absence is a factual limitation of the material you gave me [3] [1].

6. How to close the gap — what to consult next

To determine which Muslim members serve on Ways and Means, Appropriations or other high‑influence panels, consult primary House records and official member pages (House clerk, committee membership pages) or contemporary beat reporting that lists committee assignments for the 119th Congress. The current packet of sources does not include those committee lists and therefore cannot support a definitive answer about committee placement [3] [1].

Summary judgment: the supplied sources establish who the Muslim House members are and note their reelection and historic growth to four members, but they do not state whether any of those members sit on Ways and Means or Appropriations; further, authoritative committee rosters are required to answer your question definitively [2] [1] [3].

Want to dive deeper?
Which Muslim members of the U.S. House serve on Appropriations or Ways and Means as of 2025?
Which committees do Muslim members of Congress currently chair or hold leadership roles on?
How has representation of Muslim Americans on key House committees changed since 2020?
Which high-profile votes did Muslim members on Appropriations or Ways and Means participate in recently?
How do committee assignments for Muslim House members compare between Democrats and Republicans?