**Spencer Pratt finished third in the June 2, 2026 Los Angeles mayoral primary after an early lead evaporated during the extended mail-ballot count, placing him roughly 12,000–13,000 votes behind Nithya Raman for the second runoff spot behind incumbent Karen Bass.** Official tallies show Bass at approximately 34.3%, Raman at 28.5%, and Pratt at 25.8%, with the gap widening as remaining ballots were processed through mid-June. Pratt has posted video responses acknowledging the outcome and framing the end of his campaign phase without announcing or filing any recount request. California election procedures allow limited recount options, but the current certified margin exceeds typical thresholds that would justify such a step, and no court filings or official challenges have emerged from his campaign. President Trump publicly questioned the results on social media, yet Pratt’s own statements have remained focused on concession messaging rather than formal contestation. Trader consensus reflected in the 86.5% “No” price aligns with these developments: the absence of any recount demand in the two weeks since the primary, Pratt’s public posture, and the structural barriers to altering the certified outcome by the July 2 market resolution window. No subsequent ballot updates or legal actions have shifted that positioning.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket. Esto no es asesoramiento de trading y no influye en cómo se resuelve este mercado. · Actualizado¿Spencer Pratt pedirá el recuento de la primera ronda?
Sí
Sí
Any general demand for a recount will qualify. If the candidate specifies the size of their demanded recount, it must cover enough ballots such that, if changed, it could affect which candidate will advance to the runoff. Demands for minor administrative re-tallies and routine canvass corrections will not qualify as a demand for a recount for the purposes of this market.
A qualifying statement must definitively demand that a recount occur. Statements that are clearly satirical, hypothetical, or rhetorical will not qualify.
Any public statement from this candidate written or verbal will qualify. Speeches in which this candidate begins speaking within the time frame of this market will qualify, even if their demand for a recount falls outside the market’s timeframe.
Only public statements from this candidate will qualify. Reports of private conversations will not count.
Mercado abierto: Jun 8, 2026, 3:32 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Any general demand for a recount will qualify. If the candidate specifies the size of their demanded recount, it must cover enough ballots such that, if changed, it could affect which candidate will advance to the runoff. Demands for minor administrative re-tallies and routine canvass corrections will not qualify as a demand for a recount for the purposes of this market.
A qualifying statement must definitively demand that a recount occur. Statements that are clearly satirical, hypothetical, or rhetorical will not qualify.
Any public statement from this candidate written or verbal will qualify. Speeches in which this candidate begins speaking within the time frame of this market will qualify, even if their demand for a recount falls outside the market’s timeframe.
Only public statements from this candidate will qualify. Reports of private conversations will not count.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...**Spencer Pratt finished third in the June 2, 2026 Los Angeles mayoral primary after an early lead evaporated during the extended mail-ballot count, placing him roughly 12,000–13,000 votes behind Nithya Raman for the second runoff spot behind incumbent Karen Bass.** Official tallies show Bass at approximately 34.3%, Raman at 28.5%, and Pratt at 25.8%, with the gap widening as remaining ballots were processed through mid-June. Pratt has posted video responses acknowledging the outcome and framing the end of his campaign phase without announcing or filing any recount request. California election procedures allow limited recount options, but the current certified margin exceeds typical thresholds that would justify such a step, and no court filings or official challenges have emerged from his campaign. President Trump publicly questioned the results on social media, yet Pratt’s own statements have remained focused on concession messaging rather than formal contestation. Trader consensus reflected in the 86.5% “No” price aligns with these developments: the absence of any recount demand in the two weeks since the primary, Pratt’s public posture, and the structural barriers to altering the certified outcome by the July 2 market resolution window. No subsequent ballot updates or legal actions have shifted that positioning.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket. Esto no es asesoramiento de trading y no influye en cómo se resuelve este mercado. · Actualizado
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