Who is running for L.A. mayor? Here's the list
Briefly

Who is running for L.A. mayor? Here's the list
"Bass was elected Los Angeles' first female and second Black mayor in 2022 after decades of service in various elected offices. She has focused on homelessness and public safety while facing sharp criticism over the city's response to 2025 fires. Read more:Karen Bass profile (published 2022) Bass and response to Palisades fire (published 2025) Rae Huang Community organizer Huang is a community organizer, minister and dues-paying member of the Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America. She is the deputy director of Housing Now California, a coalition that fights displacement of tenants at the state and local levels."
"Adam Miller is co-founder of Better Angels, a nonprofit focused on preventing homelessness and building affordable housing. The tech executive made a fortune developing education software. Read more: Tech entrepreneur enters L.A. mayor's race, becoming the latest to take on Karen Bass Spencer Pratt Reality TV star/activist A Republican, Pratt has received praise from an array of Trump supporters, including Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and U.S. Sen. Rick Scott of Florida. He has focused heavily on the city's handling of the fire, which destroyed his home. He starred in such reality TV shows as "The Hills" and "Laguna Beach.""
Karen Bass was elected Los Angeles' first female and second Black mayor in 2022 after decades in elected office. Bass has focused on homelessness and public safety and faced sharp criticism over the city's response to 2025 fires. Rae Huang is a community organizer, minister and dues-paying member of the Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America and serves as deputy director of Housing Now California. Adam Miller co-founded Better Angels, a nonprofit aimed at preventing homelessness and building affordable housing and previously made a fortune developing education software. Spencer Pratt is a Republican reality-TV figure who criticized the city's fire response and lost his home. Nithya Raman is an L.A. City Council member who won office in 2020.
Read at Los Angeles Times
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]