Seattle mayor makes stunning admission in response to Spencer Prattâs homeless comments: âAbsolutely are a factorâ
Katie Wilson, the socialist mayor of Seattle, has finally responded to Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Prattâs claim he would move LAâs homeless to her city â even admitting the reality star turned candidate had a point.
A few weeks ago, Pratt made bold claims to a local reporter that the majority of the cityâs homeless population would disperse if forced out, saying many of them arenât even from Los Angeles. Pratt seemed to have a destination in mind.
âPeople have been bussed in by scam rehabs, scam NGOs, scam homeless nonprofits,â Pratt said. âThese people, when I unplug them and say, âWeâre not taking our taxpayer money anymore,â theyâre all going to Seattle where the mayor will welcome them.â
In the same interview, Pratt also made clear the brutal reality that many are voluntarily homeless.
âWell, theyâre not homeless. Theyâre drug addicts,â he said.
Wilsonâs office did not return a request for comment to The California Post, but in a Wednesday interview with FOX13 Seattle, she was asked about Prattâs comments.
Wilson appeared amused when the reporter asked her about Pratt, and at one point, an audience member was heard making a âwooâ sound when the reporter mentioned that Pratt may survive last Tuesdayâs primary election.
âYea, golly, was that a cheer?â she asked, to which she then makes a laugh.
âIâm not going to respond to him, but I will respond to you all,â Wilson said, referring to the audience.
âWhat is driving homelessness is housing costs. There is a very, very clear correlation between housing costs and homelessness.â
But the socialist acknowledged that Pratt had a point about drug addicts. Her city has been plagued with open-air drug use spreading across Seattleâs streets, an issue the reporter pressed on her later in the interview.
âThat does not mean that drugs are not a factor. They absolutely are a factor,â she said.

âDrugs make everything worse. If you fall into homelessness, very often people become addicted to drugs once theyâve become homeless. There are a lot of reasons for that. Or if they have a light substance use disorder, that becomes a severe substance use disorder.â
She went on to explain the cityâs efforts to pairing shelter with other services like drug treatment, behavioral help, and others to help get homeless off the streets.
Still, âthe real driver is housing costs,â Wilson said.
The Seattle mayor left unaddressed Prattâs claim she would âwelcomeâ Los Angelesâ homeless population nor gave her thoughts on Prattâs solution of shipping them to her city.
Pratt has claimed that 60% of LAâs homeless population is not actually from the area, referring to a report by the City Journal.
About 64 percent of the LA street homeless said they were from outside the City of Los Angeles, and 53 percent said they were from outside Los Angeles County, the report said. Nearly 40 percent were not from the state.
Pratt has laid out his strategy to to send homeless addicts to rehab centers on federal land. Pratt previously said in another interview with CNN that the plan is already âin the worksâ and that heâs met with 30 âliteral billionairesâ to discuss funding the facility.
Pratt, whom Republicans have coalesced around, is one of three major candidates vying to advance from the primary as votes are still being counted in California.

