Rashida set to be 1st Muslim woman in US Congress
new york — Rashida Tlaib, a mother of two and daughter of Palestinian immigrants once detained for disrupting a Donald Trump speech, made history on Wednesday, poised to become the first Muslim woman in US Congress.
The 42-year-old former social worker won a Democratic primary in Detroit safe seat. With no Republican or third-party candidates, she is positioned to enter the House of Representatives after November midterm elections. “Thank you so much for making this unbelievable moment possible. I am at a loss for words,” she tweeted. “I cannot wait to serve you in Congress.”
Her defeat of five other candidates tees her up to become the first Muslim woman in Congress, 12 years after Minnesota’s Keith Ellison became the first Muslim in the US House of Representatives.
She would also be the first Palestinian-American woman elected to the House. Representative Andre Carson, elected in 2008 and from Indiana, is the only other Muslim currently in Congress. Tlaib is one of scores of Muslims and hundreds of women running in record numbers in elections up and down the country this year, most of them part of a groundswell of Democratic opposition to the Republican president. Video footage shared on social media showed an emotional Tlaib surrounded by ecstatic supporters and hugged by her mother, who comes from a village in the West Bank, where extended family were cheering her on. “They’re glued to the TV. My grandmother, my aunts, my uncles in Palestine are sitting by and watching their granddaughter,” she said tearfully. She has called Trump’s election a “bat signal” for all women and described her run as very personal, motivated by her sons’ anxiety about being Muslims amid increased Islamophobia in America.
The Pew Research Center estimates that around 3.45 million Muslims live in the United States, making up about 1.1 per cent of the total US population.
“Me being elected is a big message to the whole country that we are part of the government. We are part of society and that we want to give back just like anyone else,” Tlaib told CBS News last May.
“’Clear out the room boys, let’s put some women there... Let’s deal with all these crises that we have in our country. It’s about time that maybe we get an opportunity to take a stab at it’,” she added. She now stands to replace 89-year-old John Conyers, who resigned after 52 years in the House following sexual harassment accusations. —