UMVA has learned that Los Angeles mayoral hopeful Spencer Pratt is unleashing a guerrilla campaign that blends pop culture, sharp rhetoric, and an unapologetic crusade for safety.
Pratt’s latest salvo takes aim at city leaders, branding their efforts to curb homelessness as a “homeless industrial complex scam” that merely launders money while the streets remain perilous.
He claims the city’s numbers are fabricated, insisting that homelessness has not fallen but surged into a “naked, drug‑addicted zombie” crisis.
In a daring move, Pratt’s AI‑generated spot casts him as Batman, battling a Joker‑like villain—his opponent, Mayor Karen Bass—while rallying voters with the promise that “moms will feel safe” under his watch.
The city’s response was swift; Bass labeled the ad “violent,” but Pratt’s message only grew louder, rallying supporters with a “pratt summer” montage that sprinkles pop culture references with hard‑hitting city truths.
Beyond the theatrics, Pratt tackles animal welfare, exposing the grim reality of over‑bred and abused dogs on Skid Row and accusing the city’s shelter system of chronic underfunding.
He vows to strip away opaque tax dashboards, demanding that every dollar be transparent enough for high school students to understand.
Pratt’s platform hinges on strict enforcement of existing laws, pledging to partner with the police chief and officers to ensure compliance—or to replace those who flout the rules.
He frames his fight as a divine mission, citing faith as the engine behind his resolve to “destroy” opponents and protect the city’s vulnerable.
Despite the heat, Pratt remains unshaken, declaring that whether he wins or loses, the battle for safety is part of a larger, God‑guided plan.
As the primary looms on June 2, Pratt’s blend of spectacle, conviction, and relentless scrutiny positions him as a bold, if controversial, contender eager to rewrite the narrative of Los Angeles.