Wildfires. Homelessness. Accountability. An 8-year plan to take the city back. Watch the full unfiltered interview with the All-In Podcast.

Platform

What Spencer Stands For

Six priorities — drawn directly from the All-In interview. No spin, no handlers.

01

Wildfire Accountability

Spencer lost his Palisades home in January 2025. He's demanding answers on drained reservoirs, absent warning sirens, and over $100M in FireAid donations that haven't reached victims.

The system failed us. I watched my house burn on my phone.
02

Homelessness — Treatment First

Not warehousing. Not endless NGO contracts. A treatment-first approach that gets fentanyl off the streets, ends open encampments, and gets people actual help.

LA doesn't have a homeless problem. We have a drug problem.
03

Fiscal Integrity & Auditing Everything

Karen Bass's $14.85B budget is a death sentence for LA. Spencer will audit every department, eliminate fraud, and end the revolving door between City Hall and the NGO complex.

I'm going in to unplug the fraud and corruption.
04

Public Safety & Rule of Law

Fully funding LAPD, enforcing existing laws, and ending the catch-and-release cycle. Zero encampments. Zero fentanyl on the streets. Consequences that actually deter crime.

Zero encampments. Zero fentanyl on the streets.
05

Small Business & Economic Recovery

LA's permitting nightmare is strangling entrepreneurs. Spencer's plan uses AI to cut approval times overnight, slashing red tape and making LA the best city in America to start a business.

The permitting system can be fixed with AI — literally overnight.
06

Hollywood & LAUSD Revival

Production is leaving. Schools are failing. Spencer will fight to bring studios back, reform LAUSD, and reverse the talent exodus eroding the cultural identity of the city.

God blessed the City of Angels. We have to redeem her.

About Spencer Pratt

Spencer Pratt rose to national prominence as a central figure on MTV's The Hills. But when the January 2025 Palisades fires burned down his family home — while Karen Bass was overseas — something shifted.

He turned his massive platform into a megaphone for wildfire victims, demanded transparency on $100M+ in relief funds, and emerged as the most prominent critic of LA's entrenched political machine.

Now he's running for Mayor. Not as a politician — as a husband, a father, and a Palisades resident who refuses to accept that this is just how LA works.