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UnverifiableOther · Politics

No Way to Know: The 2026 LA Mayoral Primary Hasn't Happened Yet

Spencer Pratt did not finish third in Los Angeles's 2026 mayoral primary

The argument in brief

A claim is circulating that Spencer Pratt did not finish third in the 2026 Los Angeles mayoral primary. The verdict is unverifiable — the election simply hasn't taken place yet. As of early 2025, no primary results exist for anyone to confirm or deny.

Why it spread

Celebrity names and political drama are a powerful combination online. When someone ties a familiar face from entertainment to a civic event, people engage and share without stopping to ask whether the event has actually occurred. The specificity of 'third place' makes the claim feel like insider knowledge, which adds to its believability.

The claim that Spencer Pratt did not finish third in Los Angeles's 2026 mayoral primary sounds specific and checkable. It isn't — because the election hasn't happened. As of early 2025, the 2026 LA mayoral primary is still in its early stages, with no votes cast and no results of any kind.

The Los Angeles City Clerk's office, the official source for certified election results, has no 2026 mayoral primary results on record. That's not a gap in reporting — it's because the race hasn't been held. Ballotpedia, which tracks U.S. elections closely, confirms the same: the 2026 contest is still forming, with candidates still entering or exploring the race.

Spencer Pratt, the reality TV personality known from The Hills, has shown interest in Los Angeles politics. That much is real. But interest in running and actually appearing on a ballot are different things, and neither a candidacy nor a result has been certified for 2026.

It's worth being honest about what we can and can't say. We can't confirm Pratt finished third. We also can't confirm he finished first, last, or anywhere else. We can't even confirm he was on the ballot. Any claim about a specific placement — in either direction — is getting ahead of reality.

This kind of claim spreads easily because it's oddly specific, which makes it feel credible. Watch out for election result claims that reference future dates, lack links to official election authority sources, or mix celebrity names with civic events to generate clicks. When in doubt, go straight to your local election clerk's website.

Sources

TellWell AI

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