With Spencer Pratt eliminated, here are the latest odds in the LA mayoral race.
In a Polymarket poll, front-runner and incumbent Karen Bass has a 61% chance of winning the race. Meanwhile, City Councilor and Progressive Democrat Nithya Raman is significantly behind with a 38% chance.
Although technically out of the running, Pratt sits in third place with a 1% chance.
Pratt was knocked out of second place in the race earlier this week. Bass ended up with 34.3% of the vote, while Raman had 28.5%. Pratt was third with 25.8%.
Since none of the candidates secured more than 50% of the vote, the top two face off. The mayoral election will take place in the autumn.
Meanwhile, Pratt has not officially conceded the race. Instead he submitted a cryptic post that just showed a duck in a body of water.
He too replied to Jimmy Kimmel, who rented him a U-Haul after he said he would move out of town if he lost the election.
“Jimmy Kimmel, I guess you missed the part of the story, I don’t need a U-Haul,” he wrote. “I have nothing left to pack.”
Pratt also shared a video of his home, completely destroyed in the Palisades wildfires of 2025. He has repeatedly stated that the experience made him want to enter politics. He announced his mayoral campaign in early 2026 and has consistently blamed Bass and other city officials for the wildfires.
While vowing to leave LA if the mayoral race didn’t go in his favor, Pratt said, “I’m taking the money from (Gov. Gavin) Newsom State Park and LADWP and I’m going to find a place where my kids don’t have to see naked zombies and I can have the last American dream somewhere.”
“I don’t want to rebuild if these people are responsible. Why would I put money into it?” he remarked.
While a registered Republican, Pratt ran as an independent in the mayoral race. Instead of accepting the “MAGA Republican” label from Raman, the former reality TV star compared herself to former President Barack Obama.
“I represent all of Los Angeles,” he previously said. “I do not represent a party. I do not have a campaign manager. I do not have campaign consultants. There is no political party that supports me.”