Spencer Pratt’s long-shot bid for Los Angeles mayor drew a new wave of attention this weekend after his sister, Stephanie Pratt, publicly urged voters to reject his campaign and leveled serious allegations about his past conduct.
In a string of posts on X, she wrote that he lacks the experience to lead the city and attacked his motives for running, adding: “A vote for him is a vote for stupidity.” She then accused him of physical assault and said he introduced her to drugs as a teenager, describing an alleged incident when she was 18 that she said left her hospitalized.
Pratt has framed his candidacy around anger at government failures tied to the Pacific Palisades wildfire that destroyed his home. He launched the run around the one-year mark of the fire and has made city and state leadership a central target, promising to “expose the system.” He also took initial steps required for ballot access: the Los Angeles Office of the City Clerk filing list shows “SPENCER PRATT” submitting a declaration of intention on Feb. 3 under the occupational designation “Community Advocate.”
No independent documentation of Stephanie Pratt’s allegations was included in her posts, and Pratt’s representatives did not respond to requests for comment reported by entertainment outlets covering the dispute.
The episode lands in a crowded municipal field that includes incumbent Karen Bass. City election materials list June 2 as the primary nominating election date, with the general election set for Nov. 3, and spell out eligibility rules for mayoral candidates, including city residency by early January.





















































