Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder officials stated Sunday that two incidents of attempted election interference may have occurred in Long Beach and elsewhere before the June 2 primary election.
The county registrar-recorder said the burned votes were found during the normal collection of ballots at an official ballot drop box at the Department of Public Social Services-Civic Center in Los Angeles.
“Staff identified a limited number of vote-by-mail ballots that appeared to have sustained fire-related damage,” the county registrar-recorder said.
The fire occurred somewhere between the last ballot pickup Saturday and the first ballot pickup Sunday and included a “small number” of ballots, officials said.
Vandalism was discovered Sunday morning at the voting center in Long Beach’s Cesar E. Chavez Park.
The county registrar-recorder’s office said election workers responded and voting operations were uninterrupted.
The county registrar-recorder said that it is “carefully reviewing both incidents and working to identify any voters who may have been affected.”
Voters who were affected by the fire will be contacted individually and given instructions on how to vote again.
“Replacement ballots are possible,” remarked the county registrar-recorder.
The county registrar-recorder has filed reports with the LAPD in the wake of the incidents.
Los Angeles County Clerk Dean Logan issued a statement Sunday alerting the public that attempts to interfere with voters, damage election infrastructure, or vandalize polling facilities “will not be tolerated.”
“Our responsibility is to protect voters and ensure every eligible voter has the opportunity to cast a ballot,” Logan said.
“Any attempt to interfere with voting or election operations is taken seriously. We will continue working closely with law enforcement and other partners to safeguard the voting process and ensure voters can participate with confidence,” Logan said.
The public is encouraged to report any suspicious activity involving election materials, election facilities, or voting operations to the county registrar-recorder by calling (800) 815-2666.
Tomorrow is Election Day in California and Mail-in ballots are being found burned and voting centers vandalized.
This is what election integrity looks like in a Democrat-run city.
This is why we need the SAVE America Act NOW.
Vote in person tomorrow! pic.twitter.com/vKqigkolJO
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) June 1, 2026
Following the release of two polls last week that blew the California governor’s race and the Los Angeles mayor’s race wide open, several unanticipated scenarios are suddenly in play.
A poll from The UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies found the mayor’s race was practically tied between mayor Karen Bass, former reality star Spencer Pratt, and councilmember Nithya Raman, eliminating what earlier polls said was a large lead for Bass.
The Berkeley IGS poll showed that in the governor’s race, former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra led with 25% of likely voters, followed by Republican commentator Steve Hilton (21%) and billionaire investor Tom Steyer (19%), suggesting that two Democrats making the run-off was still a possibility.
In California, the top two vote-getters in the primary, regardless of party, advance to the runoff.
But a California Post poll, issued Friday and taken with McLaughlin & Associates, found Pratt with a little edge in the mayor’s race, 30.1% to Bass’ 29.5%. Raman was also third with 23.4% support.
In the California Post survey for the governor’s campaign, Hilton and Steyer tied for first place with 25% support apiece, while Becerra, who’s been considered a favorite to win, was third with 19%.
The long and short of it: this may go any number of ways.
The Los Angeles mayoral race is being closely watched.
If Pratt pulls off the upset on Tuesday night, it may go down as the most expensive political race in modern American history, with the top two candidates facing off in November’s general election.
