Nithya Raman has overtaken Spencer Pratt for the first time in the race for second place in Los Angeles’ mayoral contest.
New results released by Los Angeles County show Raman with 196,198 votes, or 27.12%, compared with Pratt’s 193,085 votes, or 26.69%.
The latest tally gives Raman a 3,113-vote lead after she trailed Pratt by 7,494 votes just one day earlier. Raman picked up 19,096 votes in Sunday’s count, more than double Pratt’s gain of 8,489 votes.
The latest batch of ballots produced a 10,607-vote swing between the two candidates, erasing Pratt’s advantage and moving Raman into second place.
Mayor Karen Bass remained in first place with 250,871 votes, or 34.68%. The turnaround marks a remarkable shift from election night, when Pratt appeared well-positioned to secure a runoff spot.
As additional ballots have been counted over the past week, Raman has steadily narrowed the gap before finally moving ahead Sunday.
Pratt dropped a snarky dig at Raman’s homeless record after the new ballots dropped, citing a homeless report showing over 43,000 people are homeless in LA on any given night in 2025.
He said: “A net swing of more than 43,000 votes since Tuesday… 43,000, huh? Where have I seen that number before…? Probably nothing.”
Political observers have long noted that ballots counted later in California elections often come from younger and more progressive voters, a demographic that has been a key source of support for Raman.
The latest results arrived as scrutiny of Los Angeles County’s slow vote-counting process continued to grow.
Over the weekend, social media users circulated claims that one candidate had received zero votes in an election-night ballot update.
The allegation drew the attention of federal officials after U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli reviewed the claim.
“There was a claim circulating on social media about an election night ballot update at the Los Angeles Registrar of Voters where one candidate received zero votes,” Essayli wrote. “We reviewed official county records. The claim is false. Each candidate received votes in every update. My office will continue monitoring the election counting process and will follow the evidence wherever it leads.”
Pratt also responded to the shifting vote totals on social media Sunday.
Before the latest results were released, Pratt posted a photo of Raman and wrote: “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.”
After the new numbers were posted, Pratt returned to X and wrote: “A net swing of more than 43,000 votes since Tuesday… 43,000, huh? Where have I seen that number before…? Probably nothing. 🤷”
The post included a link to a news story about Skid Row.
Raman’s campaign, meanwhile, pointed to the latest results.
“We are encouraged by the latest vote count and remain grateful to the thousands of Angelenos who have powered this campaign,” Raman said.
Bass campaign spokesman Alex Stack signaled the mayor’s team was already looking ahead to a potential November matchup.
“If Raman maintains that position, Mayor Bass looks forward to winning a contest against an opponent who allows encampments near schools and fights against hiring more cops, yet is MIA on saving Hollywood jobs and fighting back when ICE invades L.A.,” Stack said.
Sunday’s update brought Los Angeles County to 83% of ballots counted, according to election officials.
California counties have until early July to complete and certify their election results.
The governor’s race also continued to move Sunday as former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra widened his advantage over Republican Steve Hilton.
According to results reported by the Associated Press at 5:15 p.m. Sunday, Becerra increased his total from 1,732,755 votes, or 26.8%, on Saturday to 1,882,399 votes, or 27.2%, gaining 149,644 votes in the latest rounds of counting.
Hilton rose from 1,704,821 votes and 26.4% on Saturday to 1,787,476 votes and 25.8% on Sunday, adding 82,655 votes.
The latest ballots allowed Becerra to expand his lead from 27,934 votes on Saturday to 94,923 votes by Sunday evening — an increase of 66,989 votes.
Billionaire businessman Tom Steyer remained in third place with 1,488,251 votes, or 21.5%. Although Steyer added 126,702 votes since Saturday, he remained nearly 300,000 votes behind Hilton in the race for the second spot in November’s runoff.
Election officials are expected to release another round of results Monday.
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