US Trends

which rank is part of congress

Members of Congress are not called by “ranks” like in the military; the basic “rank” that is part of Congress is simply being a member of Congress —a U.S. Senator or a U.S. Representative.

What “rank” means in Congress

In the U.S. system, Congress is the national legislature made up of two chambers:

  • The Senate (100 members, called senators).
  • The House of Representatives (435 voting members, called representatives).

Anyone serving in either chamber is a member of Congress; there is no official military-style rank like “captain” or “general.”

Formal positions often confused with rank

Within each chamber, some members hold leadership positions , which people sometimes mistake for “ranks”:

  • Speaker of the House, Majority Leader, Minority Leader, party whips.
  • Committee chair and ranking member (the highest-ranking member of the minority party on a committee).

These are leadership roles among members of Congress, but the underlying status is still “senator” or “representative,” not a different rank.

If this came from a quiz question

Many online quiz or homework questions phrase it like:

“Which rank is part of Congress? Game Moderator | Congress | Community Moderator”

In that style of question, the correct choice is “Congress,” because “Game Moderator” and “Community Moderator” are not governmental roles, while “Congress” is the body that actually exists in U.S. government.

Quick table: Congress vs non‑Congress “ranks”

[7] [3][7] [4][2] [2][4]
Option Is it part of U.S. Congress?
Senator / Representative Yes, these are members of Congress.
Speaker / Majority Leader Yes, leadership positions within Congress.
Game Moderator No, this is a gaming/community role, not governmental.
Community Moderator No, a platform/community role, not part of Congress.
**TL;DR:** When a quiz asks “which rank is part of Congress” with choices like “Game Moderator | Congress | Community Moderator,” the answer is “Congress,” and in real life the “ranks” are just being a senator or representative, plus various leadership roles inside Congress.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.