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Spencer Pratt Launches WAR Foundation to Expose L.A. Elites

Spencer Pratt has not gone quietly. After a high‑profile run for Los Angeles mayor, Pratt announced a new operation called The WAR Foundation. The website is live, the donation button is glowing, and he even posted a photo from a visit to the White House with President Donald Trump as part of the rollout. This is the clear new development: Pratt is shifting from campaign stunt to organized political combat.

Pratt launches The WAR Foundation — what changed

The WAR Foundation is live and it is asking for money. The landing page repeats a simple three‑point mission: win the war against political corruption, push for transparency and accountability, and “restore common sense” while rolling back socialism in institutions. Pratt used the same viral media style that made his campaign ad explode online. He says the campaign portion is over and the next phase is investigative, cinematic videos that will name names and expose deals he calls corrupt.

What Spencer Pratt is promising

Pratt promises “hard‑hitting cinematic documentaries” and “innovative new media.” He frames the effort as a fight against the same city leaders, consultants, and nonprofits he blames for L.A.’s decline. The message is blunt: closed businesses, needles in the streets, graffiti, and less public safety because tax dollars are being wasted. Pratt is smart to turn outrage into an organization. Voters are tired of speeches. They want answers and results — or at least receipts.

Why Los Angeles should care

This matters because Los Angeles is a national test case for what happens when city hall and liberal institutions fail to clean up basic problems. Mayor Karen Bass and Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman are still occupying the political stage, but a loud, media‑savvy group focused on exposing local deals could change the conversation. Pratt is not subtle. He will make the political class uncomfortable, and they deserve to be uncomfortable if they have been profiting while neighborhoods rot.

Questions the WAR Foundation must answer

Show me the paperwork. If Pratt wants to expose corruption, his group must start with full transparency. What is the foundation’s tax status? Who are the donors? Who runs the day‑to‑day investigations? Will this be real journalism or viral hit pieces? Donors and residents should demand clear answers before writing checks. The last thing Los Angeles needs is another group that promises reform and delivers press cycles and more mystery money behind the curtain.

Bottom line

Spencer Pratt’s launch is the news. He has moved from campaign ads to a branded nonprofit asking people to “JOIN THE WAR.” That will either force action from a complacent political class or become another celebrity vanity project. Either way, Los Angeles should welcome more scrutiny. If Pratt really wants to clean up the city, the first act is simple: be transparent, publish evidence, and let the voters decide. No one should be above sunlight — not City Hall, not nonprofits, and not a foundation asking for your dollars.

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