LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt looked more like a celebrity greeting fans than a first-time politician making one of his last campaign stops. Dressed in a gray suit, blue shirt, and a black “Pratt for Los Angeles” ball cap, he spent Sunday afternoon weaving through a crowd of supporters, posing for photos, and hearing complaints about the direction of Los Angeles ahead of Election Day.Addressing attendees, Pratt said he could feel the “hope and inspiration” of voters and argued that “common sense” motivates him despite what he described as attacks from critics.“I just want people to feel safe,” Pratt, a father of two whose Pacific Palisades home burned down in last year’s fires, said. “I want families to be able to thrive in this city, and it takes the whole city to actually change. I’m just being the voice of the community. A lot of people say, ‘Oh, he doesn’t have any experience,’ but we all have the experience of living in this city. We know what needs to be changed, and as a city, we will change it together. I’m just going to be the one fighting for the communities, being the voice of the constituents, and taking on City Hall.”
Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt speaks with a voter during a community event in the city on Sunday, May 31, 2026. (Barnini Chakraborty/Washington Examiner)













