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‘Beat the Cheat’ or Get Beaten: Spencer Pratt Exposes CA’s Ballot Free-For-All [WATCH]

Reality TV star Spencer Pratt has traded celebrity headlines for a far more explosive subject, California elections.

In a powerful 10-minute social media video, Pratt laid out [1] what he sees as the state’s core problem, and according to him, it is not the vote counting itself.

He says the ballots are counted with robotic accuracy, but the real breakdown in integrity starts much earlier in the process.

Pratt warned that California’s elections are riddled with loose regulations, nonexistent safeguards, and a general culture of apathy toward accountability.

The result, he says, is a system that practically invites abuse long before a single vote is processed.

“In judicial ethics, the mere appearance of potential fraud is disqualifying,” Pratt said.

“Same goes here.”

He was clear that his message is not meant as empty outrage.

Instead, he vows to push for genuine reform before Los Angeles elects its next mayor.

His goal is to prevent the same chaos and mistrust that has eroded confidence for years.

Voters in California, he argues, have every right to doubt a system that operates so carelessly.

“This isn’t about whether widespread fraud is proven or not,” Pratt told followers.

“The appearance of fraud is enough to swing an election. People have zero faith in this janky, inefficient system.”

It is a blunt warning, but one that many Californians quietly agree with, regardless of political party.

He went on to identify the early stages of election abuse, describing how nonprofit groups flood communities to collect ballots, including from the homeless on Skid Row.

Some of these ballot harvesters, he claimed, even tell people how to vote, a clear violation of law.

Despite official insistence that these practices are allowed, Pratt said that anyone who reads state rules knows better.

“They’ve simply removed all the mechanisms to catch the fraud and prevent it from happening,” he argued.

Pratt’s team has reportedly been investigating allegations of systemic voter abuse, focusing less on TV-friendly theatrics and more on factual evidence.

“Evidence is not proof. I don’t say things without proof,” Pratt said.

“Anyone saying there’s no evidence of fraud is lying. There’s tons of evidence and I was the one who got it.”

According to Pratt, his personal investigations unearthed disturbing footage of homeless individuals admitting that they were paid for their votes.

“All those videos you saw of homeless people admitting that they were paid for their vote, where do you think they came from?” he asked pointedly.

He accused California’s political class of turning a blind eye to the corrupt system that now dominates state politics.

Pratt added that shouting about stolen elections on social media will accomplish nothing.

“If you want to end this fraud, doing protests and complaining about stolen elections won’t get you anything. You need the fraudsters to start catching charges,” he said.

He called on investigators to do the hard work required to convert evidence into irrefutable proof.

His final message was a challenge to Californians who are tired of corruption and apathy.

“You don’t get evidence by going to rallies or storming the ballot processing center,” he said.

“You get evidence by doing real work. And the first rule of criminal investigation is you do not talk about it.”

To Pratt, it is too late for his campaign, but not too late for California.

“It’s too late for me. This is about you. It’s about the next one,” he declared.

“It’s about exposing this corrupt rig system and changing it for the next election. If I have to be the kamikaze pilot to finally get this fixed, so be it.”

He then promised that those who committed election crimes should get ready for accountability.

“The right way isn’t easy, but it ends with commie animals and handcuffs.”

WATCH:

Pratt’s shift from celebrity culture to political activism is drawing attention and sparking new debate among grassroots conservatives across the state.

Many are eager to see someone with a platform bring real awareness to how California’s lax election practices have undermined honesty in government.

His blunt talk is exactly what many Californians have been waiting to hear.

Whether Hollywood likes it or not, Spencer Pratt has thrown down the gauntlet. He is not just talking about fake scandals or social media drama.

He is demanding real election security in a state that has become the national poster child for vote manipulation concerns.

And unlike the career politicians who vanish after each scandal, Pratt does not seem ready to back down.

If state officials continue to pretend nothing is wrong, the public’s faith in elections will continue to collapse.

Californians are not buying the line that “everything is fine” when even basic transparency has been replaced by chaos.

Pratt’s new fight may be just the spark that unsettled voters need to demand a cleaner, more trustworthy system at the ballot box.

For many, it is not just about politics anymore; it is about saving the concept of fair elections from the grip of corruption.