
Spencer Pratt’s sister is making a dramatic U-turn.
A short time after publicly torching her brother’s bid for Los Angeles mayor and warning voters supporting him would be “a vote for stupidity,” Stephanie Pratt is now singing a very different tune.
“I admit I was the first person to tell people that they were idiots if they voted for my brother,” she wrote in an email to Vanity Fair.
“Wow, was I wrong. He has spent every day since the fires, finding the facts, the mistakes, the negligence and uncovering the truth that they never wanted us to know.”
The sharp reversal comes after Stephanie Pratt spent years publicly feuding with her brother and his wife Heidi Montag while repeatedly criticizing him in interviews and online.
Just months ago, Stephanie unloaded on social media over Pratt’s mayoral run, arguing LA “does not need another unqualified and inexperienced mayor” and accusing him of trying to “stay famous and sell his memoir.”
At the time, Stephanie Pratt, who largely lives in London, blasted: “Spencer has done great work for the Palisades. But LA does not need another unqualified and inexperienced mayor.”
Days later, Stephanie scrubbed her social media presence, deleting her Instagram account entirely while making her X account private and wiping recent posts.
Now, her latest comments praising Spencer Pratt mark a sharp shift in a sibling feud that has unfolded publicly for years.
The timing also comes as Spencer Pratt enters a critical stretch of the mayoral race.
Follow the latest on Spencer Pratt:
With the primary less than a week away, Pratt has gained ground in both polling and fundraising, adding new attention to a campaign that initially began as a celebrity long shot.
Recent disclosures showed a major fundraising surge that rapidly shifted the dynamics of the race and put Pratt more firmly in the spotlight as voters head into the final stretch.
The growing momentum is also showing up on the campaign trail.
Recent stops across Los Angeles have drawn energized crowds, with supporters voicing frustration over homelessness, public safety and the direction of the city as Pratt’s campaign gains steam heading into Election Day.
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