Impossible? Spencer Pratt Gets 0 Votes in 24,000 Late California Ballots — Here Are the Details
This one is hard to explain away.
In a late-night ballot drop in Los Angeles, Spencer Pratt received exactly zero votes out of roughly 24,000 ballots. Not a single one.
Pratt had been polling around 30% in the race. Yet in this batch of 24,834 new ballots, his total stayed frozen at 86,323 while the overall vote count jumped from 308,878 to 333,712.
The math doesn’t work. A candidate pulling nearly a third of the vote getting literally zero in a 24,000-ballot drop is statistically impossible under normal circumstances. The probability is so low it borders on nonexistent.
California didn’t even try to hide it. The numbers are right there in the public data for anyone to see.
This is the kind of thing that makes people lose faith in the entire system. When a candidate’s vote total doesn’t move at all while tens of thousands of new ballots are counted, it raises serious questions about how those ballots are being processed — and who’s really in control of the count.
California has a long and ugly history of election integrity problems. From ballot harvesting to extended deadlines to mysterious late-night drops that always seem to favor one side, the state has turned voting into a joke. This latest example just adds to the pile.
Voters deserve real transparency. Real chain of custody. Real audits. And real consequences when the numbers don’t add up.
Spencer Pratt getting zero votes in 24,000 ballots isn’t just suspicious — it’s insulting to anyone who still believes elections should be fair and honest.
The doors need to be kicked in on this one. The people deserve answers.
Opinion Disclaimer: This is an opinion piece. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Whatfinger News.
—

I’m shrewd, passionate, learned and energetic, God-fearing and patriotic. I’ve done a fine job reintroducing good old American conservatism to a new generation of Americans. I’ve earned the love and friendship of many, the hatred of some, but the respect of all.

