Update (2200ET): In a stunning shift, 9 days after the actual election day, LA City Councilmember Nithya Raman has suddenly overtaken former reality TV star Spencer Pratt for second place in the Los Angeles mayoral primary race on Sunday, the latest election results show.
“It’s not the people who vote that count, it’s the people who count the votes.” – Stalin https://t.co/G3iT14i3gI pic.twitter.com/hwRJP8kmff
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) June 8, 2026
With 83.2% of the expected vote in, Democratic incumbent Mayor Karen Bass, who NBC News projected on election night will advance to the November runoff, maintained her lead with 250,871 votes, or 34.68%, according to the updated vote tally released by the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk on Sunday afternoon. Raman has 27.12% of the ballots counted so far, surpassing Pratt, who has 26.69%. She is now ahead of him by 3,113 votes.
Although no news outlet has projected which candidate will face Bass in November, Bass’ campaign released a statement following Sunday’s drop, referring to Raman as the mayor’s “general election opponent.”
Spencer Pratt took to social media:
“A net swing of more than 43,000 votes since Tuesday..”
43,000, huh? Where have I seen that number before…?
Probably nothing. 🤷 https://t.co/W2E3k6PHyR pic.twitter.com/ZfzHCy9enb
— Spencer Pratt (@spencerpratt) June 8, 2026
This post on X summed up the general farce well…
Don’t forget, “democracy” itself is at stake here…
Remember everyone…we are still in the lead, and we’ve got allllllll the way til July 6th to keep counting. They’re not the only ones who know where to find votes 😉 pic.twitter.com/rqgIcwUtGZ
— Spencer Pratt (@spencerpratt) June 7, 2026
What a fucking joke!!!
* * *
Spencer Pratt entered election night with momentum, a measurable polling advantage, and what looked like a path to one of the two runoff spots in the Los Angeles mayoral race. Days later, the outcome is still unknown, and Pratt’s path to the runoff is narrowing fast. Late-arriving mail-in ballots have methodically eroded his margin over Nithya Raman, and the trajectory has prompted pointed questions about how California counts its votes and who benefits when the process drags on for weeks.
California’s jungle primary structure allows two candidates from the same party to advance to the general election, and it is widely believed that Democrats intentionally designed this system to ensure Republicans would be shut out of general elections. If Raman overtakes Pratt, the November ballot will feature two Democrats, freezing out the candidate who ran as the race’s most prominent outsider voice on crime and homelessness in a city that has become a symbol of both.
As of the latest available count, Pratt’s lead over Raman sits at just over 7,000 votes, a margin of under one percent, with roughly 22 percent of ballots still waiting to be counted. Pre-election polls had Pratt leading Raman by three to four points, and the expectation was that he would advance to the November runoff.
The gap between those projections and the current count grows harder to square with each new ballot drop. In the most recent batch, Raman pulled approximately 40 percent of the vote, compared with Pratt’s 18 percent. Even Democratic incumbent Karen Bass, the race’s front-runner, captured only 33 percent of that same drop. The remaining candidates split what was left.
The slow-rolling count and the bizarre trend of Raman getting the lead over all candidates in the mail-in vote have drawn national attention.
And former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), is blaming Gov. Gavin Newsom. “The question to the rest of the world is what happened to California elections? Well, I’ll tell you, it’s Gavin Newsom,” McCarthy said on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures. “When Gavin Newsom was elected governor of California, you knew who was elected in a day to two days. Now it takes more than weeks, almost a month.”
He continued, “Gavin changed a number of election laws in which you want to see is what did he do and why did he cause it?” He went further on the structural shifts that preceded the current chaos. “We had cut off voter registration 30 days before the election. That helps the registrars to know who’s going to vote and the candidates. Now we have same day voter, and you don’t have to show ID. Gavin changed the rules where he mails ballots to everyone. So he took away the choice to Californians to vote in person or to vote absentee. Everybody gets mailed a ballot. But he didn’t clean up the rolls. So that raises doubt in people’s minds.”
That doubt has found a louder audience online. Robby Starbuck posted a breakdown on X that laid out the ballot-drop pattern in stark visual terms.
Spencer Pratt is likely going to be overtaken by far left Nithya Raman today. This graph shows the count on Election Day through last night.
Nithya did this by suddenly winning 1st in every new ballot drop.
North Korean “elections” have more self respect. Even they’d find it absurd for 3rd to suddenly jump to 1st place in every ballot drop DAYS after an election. It’s just ludicrous. pic.twitter.com/fL0nU5k8Ma
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) June 7, 2026
Starbuck followed that with another post on Sunday morning that demonstrates just how unlikely it is that Raman would be performing so well in the mail-in ballots.
ChatGPT can’t find a single example of a 3rd place candidate surging, days AFTER Election Day, to overtake 2nd place.
It couldn’t find 1 example in all of American history. That’s what’s happening with Nithya Raman & Spencer Pratt.
Los Angeles has 3rd world country elections.
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) June 7, 2026
Mail-ins arriving before Election Day:
Bass: 38.1%
Pratt: 27.9%
Raman: 20%Mail-ins arriving after Election Day:
Raman: 37% (+17% surge)
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 7, 2026
Elon Musk entered the conversation by pointing to what he sees as the underlying mechanism. “The reason ID is banned in California (and New York) elections is to enable large-scale fraud,” Musk wrote on X, replying to Starbuck’s post. “When you combine no ID and mail-in voting, fraud is de facto legalized.“
Voters watched Pratt finish a solid second in the polls and on election night, then saw that lead steadily shrink as waves of late-arriving ballots were added to the count. When a state with California’s resources still can’t produce timely, transparent results in one of the nation’s most closely watched elections, skepticism is inevitable.
If Pratt ultimately loses a runoff spot, it will become yet another flashpoint in the growing national debate over whether Americans can trust how elections are conducted and counted.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 06/07/2026 – 22:10







