What You See Is What You Get: What Trump And Spencer Pratt Have In Common
Spencer Pratt wasn’t supposed to get this far.
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A reality television star with no traditional political background forcing a runoff in one of the bluest cities in America should make every political consultant in the country stop and ask the same question: What are voters trying to tell us?
The answer is obvious. They’re tired of being told not to believe what they see with their own eyes.
For Democrats, Los Angeles should be a five-alarm warning. Simply having a “D” next to your name is no longer enough, not even in cities where Democrats have dominated for decades.
For years, too many big-city politicians have governed as if reelection were guaranteed. They’ve enjoyed the perks of power while residents have been left dealing with the consequences. Living amongst the homelessness crisis and open drug use, rising concerns about crime, animals suffering in heartbreaking conditions, and neighborhoods that feel like they are moving in the wrong direction.
But what has angered voters the most isn’t just that these problems exist. It’s that, too often, the people in charge seem more interested in explaining them away than in fixing them.
That’s where Pratt found an opening.
His campaign made a connection with the people because before promising solutions, he did something many politicians refuse to do: He admitted there was a problem. He didn’t tell frustrated residents their concerns were exaggerated or that everything was fine. He met them where they were.
Critics immediately attacked him for having “no political experience,” but that argument doesn’t hit the same way it used to. When voters are unhappy with the results delivered by career politicians, telling them someone has spent decades inside the same system they’re frustrated with isn’t exactly the winning message people think it is.
Experience matters, but results matter more.
And Republicans should not watch what happened in Los Angeles and learn the wrong lesson. This is not proof that voter frustration automatically translates into Republican victories. It doesn’t.
The same message applies to the Right: You have to earn votes.
A Trump endorsement remains the most powerful force in Republican politics, but it is not a campaign strategy by itself. Candidates cannot simply put “endorsed by President Trump” on a mailer, avoid the hard conversations, and expect voters to show up — especially not right now.
Americans are struggling. They are worried about grocery and gas prices, housing costs, and whether the American dream is slipping further out of reach. They are watching billions spent on conflicts overseas while wondering why life feels more expensive at home.
Voters want to know that the person asking for their vote understands what they are living through.
Trump’s political rise was built on recognizing something the establishment missed: millions of Americans felt ignored, talked down to, and forgotten. Candidates who want to benefit from that movement need to remember what created it in the first place.
It was never just about a name. It was about making people feel heard.
That is the real lesson from Los Angeles.
Democrats cannot assume blue cities will stay blue simply because they always have. Republicans cannot assume a red wave arrives because of endorsements, slogans, or frustration with the other side.
Voters are done handing power to anyone who thinks they are entitled to it.
The political ground is shifting. Party loyalty is weakening. People are more willing than ever to cross traditional lines when they believe someone is actually fighting for them.
The candidates who win the future will not be the ones who tell voters what they should care about. They will be the ones brave enough to admit what voters already know.
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Vanessa Santos is a political communications specialist and the president and CEO of Renegade DC.
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