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Spencer Pratt placed third after a strong initial showing was overtaken by mail-in ballots. He posted a video claiming to hold damaging material on a remaining candidate.
Fox NewsSpencer Pratt finished third in the Los Angeles mayoral race after mail-in ballots reversed an early lead that had placed him in the top two. Pratt posted a video on Instagram shortly after the final tally. ” “You think you can get rid of me that easily?
I didn’t get in this for political power. I got in to expose this corrupt machine, and nothing has changed,” Pratt stated. He added that he possesses a video recording that could force one of the two remaining candidates to resign if elected.
Pratt said he will wait until voters choose between current Mayor Karen Bass and progressive councilwoman Nithya Raman in November. “I know a lot of dimwit jerks thought I was in this for a grift, that I was gonna roll up and leave town if I didn’t get into City Hall,” he said. ” Pratt told both candidates he hopes they “sleep well at night” over the next five months.
He contrasted their situation with residents displaced by wildfires last year and with families affected by homelessness and crime. He described the November contest as a choice between “dumb and dumber” and warned that either outcome would accelerate business departures.
“You have no idea how many major developers, hoteliers, business owners, entrepreneurs have been texting me saying they’re packing up and leaving town,” Pratt stated.
Fox News Digital contacted the Bass and Raman campaigns for comment on the video, which received more than 20,000 likes within 45 minutes of posting.
jta.orgPresident Trump stated on July 4 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu requested a White House meeting. The president said the meeting could occur after next week’s NATO Summit.
New York PostDaniyar Kessikbayev acquired the 17,150-square-foot property for $10. The home had sold for $20 million in 2012 to a shell company linked to him and carries a 2026 tax assessment of $35.5 million.
abcnews.go.comThe U.S. Supreme Court on June 29 upheld Mississippi's law allowing non-military mail-in ballots received after Election Day. The Alaska Supreme Court issued a separate ruling the same day on a Senate ballot challenge.