After the 2016 elections, there was a tremendous uproar around the country that those in power just didn’t really represent many people in the country. And so activists, many of them new to the political process, started organizing. They joined local political groups, formed new organizations and even ran for office.
The result, after Tuesday’s midterm elections, is government that looks more like the nation. A record number of women are heading to Congress, and at all levels, there are more women and minorities ready to serve.
HuffPost profiled a dozen of these historic candidates, with illustrations by Kyle Hilton.
The 38-year-old attorney and former MMA fighter will now be one of the first Native American women in Congress, joining Democrat Deb Haaland of New Mexico with that distinction. Davids will also be the first openly LGBTQ member of the Kansas congressional delegation and the first Democratic woman to represent her district. She is a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation.
"If we don't see an opportunity for something, then we just need to create it," Davids said in March about her decision to run. "We don't have the luxury of waiting. We have to make things happen." — Hayley Miller
Escobar’s victory will give the border district a Hispanic voice in Congress at a time of ferocious anti-immigration hysteria.
President Donald Trump “really frightens me and in a way that I haven’t been frightened before,” Escobar, a Democrat in the Bernie Sanders-ish vein, told HuffPost a year ago. “I worry about the planet. I worry about immigrants. I worry about women. I worry about the LGBT community. I worry about El Paso and the border." — Laura Bassett
For Omar ― who was born in Somalia and spent four years in a refugee camp in Kenya before coming to the U.S. at age 12 ― breaking barriers will be nothing new. When she was elected to the Minnesota House in 2016, she became the nation’s first Somali-American legislator.
“I hope my candidacy would allow people to have the boldness to encourage people who don’t fit into [a] particular demographic to seek office,” she told HuffPost that year. — Sarah Ruiz-Grossman
“Our district is overwhelmingly people of color, it’s working class, it’s very immigrant ― and it hasn’t had the representation we’ve needed,” Ocasio-Cortez, who is Latina, told HuffPost in June. She ran on a progressive platform that included Medicare for all and abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement. — Sarah Ruiz-Grossman
“This is a very progressive county,” Hutchinson said in October. “To have a very nonprogressive ... sheriff is just kind of odd to me.”
Hutchinson emphasized a community policing approach and said deputies would no longer ask individuals they come into contact with about their immigration status. — Matt Ferner
“I’m going to be a voice for them,” the 42-year-old daughter of immigrants told HuffPost in August, speaking of Palestinians. “I look forward to being able to humanize so many of them that have felt ‘less than’ for so long.”
Tlaib also made history in 2008 as the first Muslim woman in the Michigan Legislature. — Sarah Ruiz-Grossman
Pressley, 44, was a shoo-in to win the House seat with no Republican on the ballot, two months after her primary upset against a 10-term Democratic incumbent.
Pressley spoke out during the Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court fight, noting that she is a sexual assault survivor and felt that although his confirmation was a dark hour for the nation, it could also "be the galvanizing force for the strongest progressive movement in a generation." — Sarah Ruiz-Grossman
Noem, 46, faced a close race against Democrat Billie Sutton, the state’s Senate minority leader. Political analysts considered South Dakota to be among a number of solidly Republican states that could lean Democrat in the midterm elections. But in the end, the state stuck with the Republican candidate.
Noem didn't focus on the milestone during the race, but she said after that it was "pretty humbling" to make history. — Antonia Blumberg
The five-term congressman beat out Republican state Treasurer Walker Stapleton, a second cousin of President George W. Bush. Polis, 43, is a member of the center-left New Democrat Coalition, supporting single-payer health care and marijuana decriminalization. In 2017, he launched the Cannabis Caucus in Congress.
Earlier in the year, Polis talked about the historic nature of his candidacy and said his victory would give Colorado "an opportunity to stick a thumb in the eye of Mike Pence, whose view of America is not as inclusive as where America is today." — Lydia O'Connor
Haaland, an enrolled member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe and former state Democratic Party chair, ran a progressive campaign focused on clean energy, affordable health care and fighting for the poor.
More than 10,000 people have served in the House and over 1,300 have served in the Senate since the first Congress met in 1789. Not a single one was a Native American woman.
“Crazy, right?” Haaland, 57, said in an interview with HuffPost. “It’s 2018.” — Jennifer Bendery
Lee will now be the first black woman to represent southwestern Pennsylvania in the legislature. An attorney and labor organizer, Lee had the backing of the Democratic Socialists of America and took on the establishment with a progressive agenda.
"I can’t talk about environmental injustice without talking about education, without talking about gentrification, without talking about gun violence. ... My plan is to find a way to advance this conversation in such a way that other legislators realize that it needs to be talked about as one interconnected issue," she said. — Amanda Terkel and Daniel Marans
"I wanted Latino girls and boys to to know this is a state of opportunity and it's a welcoming state," Garcia said in March. "You have to work hard and believe in yourself and you can do it."
Garcia, 68, is part of a record wave of Hispanics who ran for office of one kind or another in Harris County — 53 candidates in all, by the Houston Chronicle’s count. — Laura Bassett
CORRECTION: This story originally misstated the first name of Sharice Davids’ opponent, Rep. Kevin Yoder, as David.