A Congressman or Congresswoman (generically, Congressperson) is a politician who is a member of a Congress. In countries with a parliament rather than a congress, "MP" (Member of Parliament) is used instead.
In the United States, a Congressman usually refers to a member of the country's House of Representatives. Technically, Senators (members of the United States Senate, the other house of the U.S. Congress) are also Congressmen, but are rarely referred to as such to avoid confusion. The title of "Congressman / woman" is usually used in conversation to address a member of the House, for example "Hello Congressman Jones."
Note: American political scientists, in a further effort to clarify the issue, now use the term Member of Congress (MC), to refer to both members of the Senate and the House, and stick to Senator and Representative when referring to members of either specific body. These terms - Member of Congress, Senator, Representative - all have the advantage of being gender-neutral, reducing the number of variant terms needed. The term also brings the U.S. into line with the rest of the world's parliamentary bodies, reducing confusion abroad.
Congresswoman Granger became the 12th Congressional representative when she was elected to the post in 1996 after a distinguished career with the City of Fort Worth, first as a member of City Council representing the east side for two years and then as Mayor for five years.
Congresswoman Granger stepped into a national leadership role in the war on terrorism by leading a bi-partisan Congressional delegation in late 2004 to Amman, Jordan to meet and assist 20 Iraqi women who were seeking election to the Iraq national assembly.
Congresswoman Granger has earned a reputation as a champion of health and education through her efforts to involve the federal government in the fight against obesity and to improve Medicare reimbursement policies for struggling community hospital and nursing homes.