Austin Beutner
Wave Wire Services
LOS ANGELES — Former Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner has announced his candidacy for mayor with a four-minute video released Oct. 13 on YouTube.
The 65-year-old investment banker and philanthropist, who ran the school district from 2018-21, will challenge Mayor Karen Bass in the June 2026 election.
“I’ll never accept the Trump administration’s assault on our values and our neighbors. Targeting people solely based on the color of their skin is unacceptable and un-American,” he said in the video.
But Beutner has questioned Bass’ record on crime and development issues, but focused his most withering criticism on her response to January’s devastating Palisades Fire, saying that the city showed a “failure of leadership” as historically strong winds spread flames through the expensive coastal enclave, gutting thousands of homes and businesses, and killing 12 people.
“Let’s move past divisive attacks and talk about accomplishments,” Bass campaign spokesman Doug Herman said in a statement issued after reports emerged that Buetner would throw his hat into the ring. “When Karen Bass ran for mayor, homelessness and public safety were the top concerns of Angelenos. And she has delivered in a big way.
“Today, homelessness has decreased two consecutive years for the first time in LosAngeles. Thousands of people have been moved off our streets and into housing. Violent crime is down across the city. Homicides have decreased to their lowest levels in 60 years,” Herman added.
“These achievements represent real progress for families in Los Angeles. There’s more work ahead, but this administration has proven it can deliver. Mayor Bass is committed to building on this historic momentum in her second term.”
The Palisades Fire damaged Beutner’s house, and his mother-in-law’s home was destroyed.
An after-action report issued by the Los Angeles Fire Department last week said the department experienced poor communication, inexperienced leadership, a lack of resources and an ineffective process for recalling firefighters back to work during the crisis.
In light of the report, Bass has promised to make changes.
“When you have broken hydrants, a reservoir that’s broken and is out of action, broken [fire] trucks that you can’t dispatch ahead of time, when you don’t pre-deploy at the adequate level, when you don’t choose to hold over the Monday firefighters to be there on Tuesday to help fight the fire — to me, it’s a failure of leadership,” Beutner said.
“At the end of the day, the buck stops with the mayor,” he said.
Beutner served as publisher of the Los Angeles Times from 2014-15. He also was a deputy mayor of Los Angeles from 2010-13, during former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s second term.
Developer Rick Caruso, who lost to Bass in 2022, is also a possible candidate in 2026. Caruso also owns property in Pacific Palisades and has also been a vocal critic of Bass’ leadership during the fire crisis, writing on social media last week that “Her and the city’s incompetence, mismanagement, and failure to plan, prepare and predeploy directly led to people dying, thousands of lives being upended, and put on full display the consequences of ineffective and incapable leadership.”
Bass fired back Oct. 8.
“Well, the way he characterized me sounded like Trump,” she said. “But I just was saddened by it, honestly, because that response was beneath him. This is when the city needs to stand together. Why would you do that? So he’s better than that and I was just disappointed and sad.”