Karen Bass thought this race was already hers. Instead, Los Angeles just sent a political earthquake. As votes crawl in from the June 2 primary, a reality TV star–turned–Republican insurgent, Spencer Pratt, is suddenly within striking distance, shattering decades of Democratic certainty and accusing the sitting mayor of breaking election law on cam… Continues…
Los Angeles, long considered safely in Democratic hands, is now staring at a runoff that feels less like routine politics and more like a referendum on the city’s unraveling. Karen Bass leads, but not decisively. Spencer Pratt, dismissed early as a novelty, is now the vessel for anger over crime, homelessness, addiction, wildfires, and a business climate many say is suffocating the city’s future.
Pratt’s supporters argue that his blunt style and outsider status cut through years of polished promises and worsening streets. His formal complaint accusing Bass of illegal electioneering near a ballot box only deepens the sense that the old rules are breaking down, and that powerful incumbents no longer fear them. Bass’s team calls it a stunt. But the numbers, and the mood, say something else: Los Angeles is no longer certain what kind of leader it wants—or which party it trusts to save it.
