At the 2024 Spring election, state representative
Marisabel Cabrera was elected a
Wisconsin circuit court judge, and would therefore have to resign her seat in the
Wisconsin State Assembly. Just days after the Spring election, Prado announced that she would run as a Democrat to succeed Cabrera in the
9th Assembly district. The 9th district comprised much of the southwest side of the city of Milwaukee, and is one of two Wisconsin Assembly districts with a majority-Hispanic electorate. Prado was not the first Democrat to enter the race, however, and faced a primary election against 21-year-old Milwaukee Area Technical College student Deisy España. España earned endorsements from progressive organizations, including the Wisconsin
Working Families Party,
Citizen Action Wisconsin, Voces de la Frontera, Wisconsin Muslim Civic Alliance, and had outspoken support from progressive lawmakers
Ryan Clancy,
Francesca Hong, and
Darrin Madison. Prado, however, was supported by institutional organizations, such as Milwaukee Professional Firefighters Local 215, the Milwaukee Police Association, and the Wisconsin Realtors Association, and was supported by neighboring-district Hispanic state representative
Sylvia Ortiz-Velez. Prado prevailed in the primary with 69% of the vote, and went on to defeat perennial Republican candidate Ryan Antczak in the general election. She was sworn in as a member of the Assembly on January 6, 2025. ==Personal life and family==