She served on the Bay Area Rapid Transit board of directors[4] and on the board of trustees of the California State University system.[5] She served as a trustee of the San Francisco Foundation and president of MeadowFund, a community investment fund created by Patricia Quillin, the wife of Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings, and was president of Akonadi Foundation, an organization focused on racial justice in Oakland, California.[6] In 2003, she became the youngest woman to receive a MacArthur Fellowship for her leadership of the Center for Young Women's Development (now the Young Women's Freedom Center) in San Francisco at the age of 26.[7][8]
Early life and education
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Simon was born and raised in the Western Addition neighborhood of San Francisco. She attended Washington High School, where she joined the debate team. Beginning at age 15, she did outreach work for the Young Women's Freedom Center.[9]
Simon was elected to represent the seventh district on the Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART) board of directors in 2016.[14] Her motivations for running included her reliance on BART, as someone who is legally blind and unable to drive.[15] In 2020, she was elected president of the board of directors.[14]
In 2022, BART officials announced that Simon had been removed from the board after it was determined that her residence lay outside District 7, making her ineligible to represent the district. Simon stated that she had moved due to threats against her family stemming from her advocacy on police reform, and that she had been assured by BART staff prior to moving that the new residence was within district boundaries. She described the outcome as "deeply disappointing."[16]
Later that month, BART reversed its decision and reinstated Simon to the board.[17]
Elections
Lateefah Simon at the Oakland Pride Parade during her campaign for Congress
Simon has positioned herself within the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, supporting policies modeled on European social democracies.[26]
Economic policy
She has advocated for a federal jobs guarantee, a national minimum wage of at least $15 per hour, universal health care, expanded union protections, and strengthened safety-net programs such as Medicaid and food assistance.[27] She has opposed budgetary cuts to education, health care, and social services while criticizing defense appropriations, pledging to vote against legislation that funds warfare.[28]
Environment
Simon has aligned with environmental justice groups in California, voicing support for policies aimed at transitioning away from fossil fuels and resisting corporate lobbying from the oil industry.[29]
Foreign policy
In Congress, Simon has been critical of U.S. military intervention and funding of foreign conflicts. She has called for reductions in defense spending and a reorientation of federal resources toward domestic welfare, health care, and education.[30]
China
Simon has opposed tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on Chinese imports, describing them as harmful to working families by driving up consumer prices. She has framed tariff policy as a form of “economic sabotage” that burdens households while failing to address structural inequalities.[27]
Israel–Palestine
Simon has been outspoken in her criticism of Israeli military operations in Gaza and U.S. financial and military support for them. She described Israeli actions against Palestinians seeking humanitarian aid as “devastating, deplorable, and unacceptable,” and stated that the United States has been complicit in civilian deaths.[31] She has characterized the situation in Gaza as a humanitarian crisis marked by famine and civilian suffering, urging an end to U.S.-backed violence and restrictions on aid delivery.[32]
Simon is the mother of two children.[11] Simon's husband, Kevin Weston, was a journalist and activist who died from leukemia in 2014.[35] She is Muslim and legally blind.[36][37]