Spencer Pratt is turning heartbreak into a political crusade as the former “The Hills” star mounts a headline-grabbing bid to become the next mayor of Los Angeles.The reality TV personality, whose home was destroyed in the catastrophic Palisades Fire, is channeling voter anger over homelessness, crime fears and city decline into a long-shot campaign that's suddenly impossible to ignore.Pratt, who claims he has the support of A-list stars and that he’s on good terms with two of Los Angeles’ street gangs, has emerged as the outsider shaking up the race, blasting City Hall over what he calls years of failure and accusing political leaders of letting Los Angeles spiral into chaos.“We can’t give up on LA,” Pratt told applauding supporters at a block party Sunday. “We’ve got to fight” (Reuters)"I’m an Angeleno who's had enough," Pratt has declared, vowing to tackle the city's homeless crisis and beef up police numbers if elected.His campaign has become a social media sensation, fueled by viral AI-generated videos and a growing base of frustrated voters who say LA's problems have only gotten worse.The Republican candidate has made the devastating wildfire that destroyed his home a centerpiece of his campaign, arguing that the city's response exposed deeper failures in leadership.Pratt, a Republican and former star of the reality television show “The Hills,” accuses Bass of letting the fires get out of control and failing to make enough progress on the homeless crisis (Reuters)Meanwhile, Los Angeles residents continue to grapple with sprawling homeless encampments, soaring living costs, dirty streets, and an exodus of jobs from Hollywood.Pratt's insurgent run has even caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who recently remarked: "I heard he's a big MAGA person."Despite being a massive underdog in a city where Republicans make up less than 15% of registered voters, Pratt is positioning himself as the anti-establishment alternative to career politicians.Democratic Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is looking for a return trip to city hall Tuesday while facing challenges from both ends of the political spectrum (Reuters)Standing in his way is incumbent Mayor Karen Bass, who is fighting for a second term while still facing criticism over her handling of the deadly 2025 wildfire and the city's ongoing homelessness crisis.With voter frustration running high and 14 names on the ballot, Pratt is betting that Angelenos are ready to swap City Hall insiders for a reality TV rebel promising to shake up the system.