A wide-angle view of the U.S. Capitol building at dusk for an article about the first Latina senator

Catherine Cortez Masto becomes the first Latina elected to the U.S. Senate

On the night of November 8, 2016 C.E., as Senate races across the country determined who would control the upper chamber of Congress, Catherine Cortez Masto flipped history. The former Nevada attorney general and daughter of a Mexican immigrant defeated Republican Joe Heck to win the seat being vacated by Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid — and in doing so, became the first Latina senator in the history of the United States.

Key facts

  • First Latina senator: Cortez Masto’s victory in Nevada made her the first woman of Latin American heritage ever elected to the U.S. Senate, in a chamber that has existed since 1789 C.E.
  • Nevada Senate race: The contest was considered one of the most competitive of the 2016 C.E. cycle, with Cortez Masto and Heck running neck and neck in polls — Democrats ultimately prevailed in part by running up large early-voting margins in Clark County.
  • Political background: Cortez Masto served two terms as Nevada’s attorney general before the race, and was seen as a key figure in the Democratic political organization built by outgoing Senator Harry Reid over three decades.

A barrier 227 years in the making

The U.S. Senate was established in 1789 C.E. For 227 years, no Latina had held a seat in it. That is not a gap that happened by accident — it reflects the structural barriers that have historically limited Latino political representation at the federal level, even as Latino Americans have shaped the culture, economy, and identity of the country for centuries before it was even founded.

Cortez Masto’s victory arrived at a moment when those stakes were unusually visible. The 2016 C.E. presidential campaign had been marked by rhetoric targeting Latino immigrants, and Democratic strategists made a deliberate effort to mobilize Latino voters in Nevada who were, as one campaign framework put it, both repulsed by that rhetoric and energized by the prospect of sending one of their own to Washington for the first time.

It worked. The surge in early voting — particularly in Clark County, which surrounds Las Vegas and holds a large Latino population — helped build a cushion that proved decisive.

Who is Catherine Cortez Masto

Cortez Masto was born in Las Vegas. Her grandfather came to the United States from Mexico. She earned a law degree from Gonzaga University and went on to serve as Nevada’s attorney general from 2007 C.E. to 2015 C.E., where she became known for her work on mortgage fraud prosecutions in the aftermath of the 2008 C.E. financial crisis — a cause that mattered enormously to Nevada, one of the states hit hardest by foreclosures.

She was recruited to run by Reid himself, who was stepping down after 30 years and was determined to leave his seat — and the Senate’s balance of power — in Democratic hands. Reid’s political operation in Nevada was considered one of the most effective ground-level party organizations in the country, and it played a significant role in delivering the margin Cortez Masto needed.

What the victory meant beyond Nevada

The immediate political significance was clear: Cortez Masto’s win helped Democrats hold the seat and deny Republicans the Senate pickup they needed. But the historical resonance ran deeper than vote counts.

Latino Americans make up roughly 19 percent of the U.S. population — tens of millions of people with roots across Mexico, Central America, South America, the Caribbean, and Spain, with histories in North America that predate the United States by centuries. Their representation in the Senate had, until November 8, 2016 C.E., never included a Latina woman.

Cortez Masto’s election did not resolve that gap overnight. Latino representation in Congress remains far below the share of the population Latino Americans represent. But the moment registered as a concrete, documented step — proof that the barrier could fall.

President Barack Obama, who campaigned for Cortez Masto in October 2016 C.E., framed the choice simply: elect “the first Latina senator, who believes everyone deserves a chance,” or don’t. Nevada chose to.

Lasting impact

Cortez Masto was reelected in 2022 C.E. in another competitive Nevada race, cementing her as a durable political figure rather than a symbolic one-term milestone. Her continued presence in the Senate has made space for conversations about Latino policy priorities — immigration, housing, healthcare — that are too often absent from the chamber’s agenda.

Her election also demonstrated, in a measurable way, that Latino voter turnout could decide statewide contests. That lesson has shaped campaign strategy in Nevada and beyond in every election cycle since.

Blindspots and limits

One senator, even a historic one, cannot close the representation gap alone — and the Senate’s structural design, with two seats per state regardless of population, has always made it a slow institution to diversify. Cortez Masto’s victory was a genuine first, but Latino Americans remained significantly underrepresented in the chamber as of 2016 C.E., and progress since has been incremental. The milestone also arrived in the context of a national election in which anti-Latino rhetoric reached new intensity, a reminder that symbolic progress and political hostility can coexist in the same moment.

Read more

For more on this story, see: HuffPost — Catherine Cortez Masto defeats Joe Heck

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