If Spencer Pratt moves on to the general election and is serious about winning, he needs to learn from the political revolution pursued by his polar opposites, the local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America.
A huge, waning moon glimmered over Los Angeles on election night, a metaphor for a trend that emerged in early returns. The city’s political establishment seemed to be on the retreat in favor of populist insurgents from both the left and the right.in her bid for a second term, and the Associated Press declared that she had made it into the November runoff election.
But the underwhelming amount of support she got thus far showed that many voters in a super-blue city didn’t have enough confidence in a Democratic stalwart to return her to office. Instead, many chose self-proclaimed upstarts from opposite ends of the political spectrum: Republican reality TV star Spencer Pratt and democratic socialist City Councilmember Nithya Raman.her longtime ally Bass, figuring that enough Angelenos were tired of the incumbent and would join her message of change from inside City Hall.
Raman’s instincts were half right. Voters did want change. But they didn’t view her as a challenge to the status quo — to many, sheThe mayoral hopeful didn’t articulate a platform that radically departed from Bass’, and voter antipathy to her muddled messaging showed: she ended the night in third place. If the current results hold, Bass would face Pratt in the runoff.
Follow live updates, analysis and highlights from 2026 election day’s key races, such as California governor, Los Angeles mayor, L.A. city council and more. At Raman’s election-night party at Boomtown Brewery on the outskirts of Little Tokyo, I saw why her chances of becoming L.A. ’s next mayor were slim from the start. The gathering felt like happy hour at a Silver Lake bar: far whiter than the city overall, with few Latinos.
Her address to a packed house was a grab bag of platitudes mixed with a broadside against MAGA, which is a political nothing in L.A. politics. It was an uninspiringand reflective of a campaign that wasn’t apocalyptic enough for those, like Pratt’s people, who want radical change, while offering nothing new for Bass supporters.
“Together, we built something extraordinary,” she said to cheers. “And it gives me so much inspiration to be a part of it, a movement powered not by cynicism or political insiders, but by ordinary people who still believe Los Angeles is worth fighting for. ” Raman then went on the dance floor to greet well-wishers, pumping her fist while a DJ blasted Daft Punk’s “Lose Yourself to Dance.
”Across town in West Los Angeles, Pratt reveled in his second-place position, enjoying a Mexican dinner with friends and family. It was a peaceful conclusion toagainst Bass , nonprofits, homeless people and anything that reeked of Democratic pieties, even as the Republican swore he was campaigning for all ideologies in a nonpartisan race. Long dismissed as a has-been joke, Pratt correctly judged that Angelenos are angry and don’t want to be polite about it anymore.
He and his supporters will take his unlikely rise as a mandate to double down against liberal L.A. , does move on to the general election and is serious about winning, he needs to learn from the political revolution successfully pursued by his polar opposites, the local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America..
Even as Raman and three other DSA members joined the council, skeptics dismissed them and their progressive policies as anomalies that didn’t reflect how Angelenos actually wanted the city to work. Tuesday night, four of the six DSA-endorsed candidates in L.A. city elections were in first place by large margins and another was comfortably in second, reflecting DSA’s multicultural, citywide reach.
In a telling sign of its newfound king-making status, the local chapter declined to endorse Raman or any other mayoral candidate. Without that powerful backing, their trailblazer, along with DSA member Rae Huang, withered on their L.A. revolutionary vine. Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez and L.A. Unified school board member Rocío Rivas looked to be coasting to outright victories.
Marissa Roy was on her way to a runoff, Hydee Feldstein Soto, who was a distant third in the early returns. In District 9, where Curren Price is terming out, Estuardo Mazariegos stood comfortably in second place and looked to headed to a runoff against a fellow Latino candidate in a race that will see South Los Angeles The most surprising outcome involved Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, who became a punching bag, along with Bass, for people who thought L.A. had transformed into a hellhole.
So-called dark money groups, which don’t have to reveal where their funding comes from,against drug dealers and gangs in the MacArthur Park area as an indictment of her leadership, berating her during debates and on social media. Even Hernandez’s supporters were fretting about what might happen on election night. But by the time I arrived at her raucous soirée in Highland Park, early returns showed her way ahead of the field and perhaps avoiding a runoff.
“It’s reassuring to see ,” she said as jubilant supporters lined up beside her to get tattoos — real ink, not temporary — of hummingbirds, her campaign’s logo. “That means people see us. That means people want more. ”“What happened with DSA over there didn’t happen overnight,” she said.
“In L.A. , we’re getting there. ” A table filled with campaign buttons for Council Memer Hugo Soto-Martinez, who ran for reelection this year and is expected to win outright. L.A. hasn’t suddenly become a land of Trumpers and closet commies, of course.
Two incumbent council members who are centrist Democrats are also on their way to easy victories, while. Centrists Timothy Gaspar and Barri Worth Girvan have a huge lead over their rivals for the San Fernando Valley council seat But anyone who wants to win in Los Angeles needs to realize that antiestablishment sentiment is in the air. At the same time, I would remind the victorious populists to look up in the sky and remember their Shakespeare.
“O, swear not by the moon, th’ inconstant moon / That monthly changes in her circle orb / Lest that thy love prove likewise variable,” Juliet warned Romeo. , waxes and wanes whether we like it or not, and anyone who bets on a permanent transformation at City Hall will probably lose. The following AI-generated content is powered by Perplexity. The Los Angeles Times editorial staff does not create or edit the content.
The article argues that early primary returns in the Los Angeles mayor’s race reveal a strong antiestablishment mood, with voters sending a message that a super-blue city is no longer automatically rallying behind a Democratic incumbent such as Mayor Karen Bass, whose first-place finish was notably underwhelming rather than commanding. It contends that self-styled insurgents on both the left and right captured this mood more effectively than traditional liberals, pointing to Republican reality TV figure Spencer Pratt and democratic socialist Councilmember Nithya Raman as the candidates who tried to embody “change” — even though only Pratt ultimately broke through.
The piece portrays Raman as a politician who has, in voters’ eyes, become part of the status quo she helped disrupt in 2020, noting that her mayoral platform did not markedly differ from Bass’ agenda and that her late-breaking challenge, coupled with messaging focused on broad progressive themes and anti-MAGA rhetoric, failed to convince Angelenos she represented a genuinely new direction. It further suggests that the social and demographic makeup of Raman’s election-night party — likened to a Silver Lake happy hour and described as disproportionately white, with few Latinos — underscored a disconnect between her campaign’s self-image as a grassroots movement and the broader, more diverse city whose hunger for change she claimed to represent.
The article characterizes Pratt as having accurately read public frustration, channeling anger at homelessness, nonprofit contractors, and “Democratic pieties” into an unapologetically caustic campaign and parlaying that into a likely spot in the November runoff, even as the candidate insists in public that the race is nonpartisan and open to “all ideologies.
”It credits the Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America with waging perhaps the most effective “political revolution” in the city: after being dismissed as fringe just six years ago, the group is depicted as a new king-making force whose diverse, citywide coalition put most of its endorsed candidates in first place and, in a pointed exercise of power, withheld a mayoral endorsement that left both Raman and fellow DSA member Rae Huang politically exposed.
The piece highlights DSA-backed incumbents such as Hugo Soto-Martínez, Rocío Rivas and Eunisses Hernandez as evidence of this left-populist surge, stressing that their strong showings — including Hernandez’s ability to withstand heavy “dark money” attacks and possibly avoid a runoff — demonstrate that many Angelenos are embracing sharper breaks from traditional governing approaches, particularly on policing, housing and social services. At the same time, the article notes that not all victories fit a populist narrative: several centrist Democrats and moderates are cruising to re-election or leading open-seat races, underscoring that the electorate is complex and that anger at “the establishment” is being expressed in multiple, sometimes contradictory directions across the ideological spectrum.
Ultimately, the piece cautions against reading the night as a permanent realignment, invoking Shakespeare’s “inconstant moon” to argue that political moods wax and wane; in this view, Angelenos have clearly declared they want dramatic change in June, but their appetite for insurgents — and their patience with the upheaval that real change entails — may look very different by November. In contrast to the column’s skepticism about lasting transformation, DSA-aligned officials and activists cited in the piece treat the same results as proof that a deep, long-term progressive realignment is underway in Los Angeles politics, with Eunisses Hernandez explicitly interpreting the night’s outcome as evidence that “people see us” and “want more,” and likening L.A.
’s trajectory to a slow but steady socialist breakthrough comparable to what the group claims in New York City. Within DSA circles, the success of endorsed candidates is framed less as generalized antiestablishment anger and more as an affirmative endorsement of specific left policy priorities on policing, housing and education; this perspective views the organization not merely as a protest vehicle but as an emerging governing coalition, implicitly challenging the article’s portrayal of the moment as inherently unstable and subject to quick reversal.
Other election coverage has placed far more emphasis on Bass’ status as the top vote-getter and on the conventional structure of an incumbent-vs.-challenger runoff, focusing on her advancement to November and her record in office rather than treating the primary as a wholesale repudiation of the city’s political establishment; this framing suggests continuity in leadership and institutions even amid voter frustration.
Live results reports also highlight that Bass remains ahead of the field and that, under Los Angeles’ system, a candidate only needs to finish in the top two to reach the general election, a focus that portrays the night as part of a standard electoral cycle rather than as a turning point in which the establishment is “on the retreat” in a decisive or irreversible way.
Coverage of council and school board races notes that multiple centrist or moderate Democrats are winning easily or running unopposed, and that business-friendly and pragmatic candidates remain competitive in key districts, offering a counternarrative to the idea of a city swept by insurgents; from this vantage point, Los Angeles appears less like an electorate in full revolt and more like one finely balancing calls for change with a preference for experienced, steady governance.
Some local reporting and commentary on Pratt’s rise has stressed his celebrity and name recognition, as well as the fractured nature of the anti-Bass field, rather than treating his second-place standing alone as proof of a broad ideological mandate; this view implicitly challenges the notion that his performance reflects a coherent right-populist wave comparable in organizational strength to DSA’s methodical, multi-cycle build-out.
Finally, election-focused outlets that concentrate on vote tallies, turnout patterns and institutional rules — rather than on a populist-versus-establishment storyline — provide a quieter but significant alternative framing: they present the 2026 primary as a contest shaped by incumbency, coalition discipline and Los Angeles’ nonpartisan runoff structure, not primarily as an uprising that has put City Hall on the verge of permanent transformation. Gustavo Arellano is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times, covering Southern California everything and a bunch of the West and beyond.
He was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Opinion Writing in 2026 and Commentary in 2025. He was also a finalist in 2025 for the Mike Royko Award for Commentary and Column Writing and was part of the team that won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Breaking News for reporting on a leaked audio recording that upended Los Angeles politics.
Arellano previously worked at OC Weekly, where he was an investigative reporter for 15 years and editor for six, wrote a column called ¡Ask a Mexican! and is the author of “Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America. ” He’s the child of two Mexican immigrants, one of whom came to this country in the trunk of a Chevy. Rebuilding L.A.
: How One Eaton Fire Survivor Has Found the Strength to Move On and Rebuild Author and CBS News correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti attempts to answer some questions about rebuilding communities in his new book about the Palisades Fire — and names a motive for a quick rebuild: the Olympic games coming to Los Angeles in 2028. Today we discuss one of the pivotal events of the 1960s: the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.
Though the gunman was caught at the scene, confessed at trial, and even bragged about the shooting, his motives have largely been forgotten. Fidel Martínez and Suzy Exposito sit down with Dominican-American singer, actress, and Latin Grammy-nominated artist Leslie Grace for a wide-ranging conversation about music, movies, and what it means to be Latino in Hollywood today.
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