Quick answer

The official City Clerk record is the anchor: Spencer Pratt appears on the certified candidate list for Mayor of the City of Los Angeles in the June 2, 2026 Primary Nominating Election. The same election calendar lists November 3, 2026 as the General Municipal Election. That means search interest around Pratt is attached to a real ballot path and a wider civic conversation.

Why the search interest is spiking

Pratt's campaign is drawing attention beyond the usual municipal-politics audience because it combines a high public profile, recent wildfire recovery coverage, social video distribution, and an incumbent LA mayor race. The resulting search intent is broad. Some readers want to know whether he is officially running, some want to understand the field, and some are looking for a source-backed guide after seeing social clips or entertainment coverage.

What the public record says

The certified candidate list gives the strongest baseline facts: office, election, candidate name, and occupational designation. It lists Pratt as "SPENCER PRATT" under Mayor and describes the designation as "Community Advocate." It also places him in a crowded mayor field that includes incumbent Karen Ruth Bass and several other certified candidates. That context matters because current attention becomes more useful when it is connected to the full field.

What campaigns should verify next

Campaigns should treat the current attention as a research queue. The next useful records are campaign finance filings, candidate statements, endorsements, debate transcripts, public social posts, polling, and public responses. The key is to separate official facts from media narratives. OppIntell's role is to keep those paths connected so search traffic can move from curiosity to cited research.