
The Hills star Audrina Patridge honestly hopes her former costar Spencer Pratt becomes the next mayor of Los Angeles.
âIâm actually excited,â Partridge, 40, exclusively told Us Weekly on Friday, May 1, while attending Calamigos Ranch Resort & Spaâs Leading Hotels of the World accreditation celebration. âHe impressed me. I listened to some of his interviews, and at first when I heard, I was like, âWait, is he really doing it? Is it a joke? Is it real?â But he is, and he is very intelligent, and I think that he would make a lot of change to L.A. and he would follow through with what he said.â
She continued, âSo Iâm rooting for him.â
As a resident of Orange County, Partridge is unable to vote in the upcoming mayoral election. Still, she hopes her former reality TV castmate can âbring backâ the Los Angeles she remembers from 15 years ago.
âHeâs very smart. He knew how to work reality TV. I know politics is very different â but I mean, he seems very intelligent and is well educated on what he needs to do,â she said. âBring back L.A., what it was 15 years ago when it was fun to go out. Itâs so different now.â
Pratt, 42, announced his mayoral campaign on January 7 â one year after the devastating L.A. wildfires destroyed his and wife Heidi Montagâs home.

âThe system in Los Angeles isnât struggling, itâs fundamentally broken,â the former reality TV star said while speaking at the âThey Let Us Burnâ public demonstration. âIt is a machine designed to protect the people at the top and the friends they exchange favors with while the rest of us drown in toxic smoke and ash. Business as usual is a death sentence for Los Angeles, and Iâm done waiting for someone to take real action.â
The controversial candidate is among 13 challengers trying to unseat incumbent Karen Bass. If successful, Pratt will join a growing list of reality TV stars-turned-politicians, including Real Worldâs Sean Duffy, now the secretary of transportation, and Celebrity Apprenticeâs Donald Trump, currently the president of the United States.
Like Trump, 79, Prattâs campaign is already causing controversy after he released an ad filmed outside the homes of two of his opponents â Bass and Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman.
Raman condemned Pratt for filming outside her house, calling it an âunnecessary and recklessâ political stunt, while Mayor Bass accused her rival of doing his âbest Trump impression.â
The controversy only seemed to help Pratt, who received an infusion of campaign cash from former Los Angeles Lakers owner Jeanie Buss, a bump in poll numbers and an increase in celebrity endorsements. Political commentator and former The View cohost Meghan McCain has predicted Pratt will win the mayoral race.
Prattâs sister Stephanie Pratt, however, has condemned her brotherâs political ambitions, calling him âunqualifiedâ and âinexperienced.â
âSpencer has done great work for the Palisades,â she wrote via X in February after her brother announced his candidacy. âBut LA does not need another unqualified and inexperienced mayor. A vote for him is a vote for stupidity.â (Us reached out to Spencer at the time for comment.)
In an exclusive interview with Us, Spencer spoke candidly about his political goals.
âWinning the mayorâs race will be a victory for truth and transparency, which is what Iâve been fighting for this whole year,â he said in January. âThe end goal is the same: to shine a light into the darkness.â


