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Adam Miller (Los Angeles mayoral candidate, California)

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Adam Miller
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Candidate, Mayor of Los Angeles
Elections and appointments
Next election
June 2, 2026
Contact

Adam Miller is running for election for Mayor of Los Angeles in California. Miller is on the ballot in the primary on June 2, 2026.[source]

Elections

2026

See also: Mayoral election in Los Angeles, California (2026)

General election

The primary will occur on June 2, 2026. The general election will occur on November 3, 2026. General election candidates will be added here following the primary.

Nonpartisan primary

Nonpartisan primary election for Mayor of Los Angeles

The following candidates are running in the primary for Mayor of Los Angeles on June 2, 2026.

Candidate
Image of Karen Bass
Karen Bass (Nonpartisan)
Bryant Acosta (Nonpartisan)
Image of Asaad Alnajjar
Asaad Alnajjar (Nonpartisan)  Candidate Connection
Image of Rae Chen Huang
Rae Chen Huang (Nonpartisan)
Nelson Cheng (Nonpartisan)
Image of Tish Hyman
Tish Hyman (Nonpartisan)  Candidate Connection
Image of Andrew Kim
Andrew Kim (Nonpartisan)
Suzy Kim (Nonpartisan)
John Logsdon (Nonpartisan)
Juanita Lopez (Nonpartisan)
Adam Miller (Nonpartisan)
Spencer Pratt (Nonpartisan)
Image of Nithya Raman
Nithya Raman (Nonpartisan)
Andrej A. Selivra (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Endorsements

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Campaign themes

2026

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Adam Miller has not yet completed Ballotpedia's 2026 Candidate Connection survey. Send a message to Adam Miller asking them to fill out the survey. If you are Adam Miller, click here to fill out Ballotpedia's 2026 Candidate Connection survey.

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You can ask Adam Miller to fill out this survey by using the button below or emailing info@votemiller.com.

Email

Campaign website

Miller's campaign website stated the following:

A plan where LA THRIVES

Too often, candidates focus on what the other side did wrong. That’s not enough.

For Los Angeles to flourish, we need a real plan and leadership with the ability to execute it. This is a practical, focused agenda to help LA live better and become a city that truly thrives.



Transparency


Why it matters:

People deserve to know how decisions are made, how money is spent, and who is accountable. When government is obscure, trust breaks down and nothing works the way it should.


The plan:

Open up city data, budgets, and timelines so residents can see progress clearly through a new MyLA app

Measure results publicly and hold leadership accountable for delivery

Extensive use of social media for communication of city priorities



Homelessness


Why it matters:

Tens of thousands of Angelenos are living on the streets – without stability or dignity, even after billions of dollars have been spent. When the city operates without coordination or accountability, people fall through the cracks and the crisis compounds.


The plan:

Prevent homelessness before it starts by pairing eviction notices with automatic outreach and prevention services

Unify and modernize shelter management so beds, mental health and addiction services, and outreach teams are coordinated citywide

Prioritize interim housing that works — upgrading shelters, expanding tiny home villages, and converting congregate housing where possible

Dramatically expanding affordable housing supply through streamlined approvals, incentives and modular construction



Rent


Why it matters:

High housing costs are the single biggest factor causing an affordability crisis in LA. Housing costs are squeezing working families, pushing people out of their neighborhoods, and driving homelessness. When rent rises faster than wages, stability disappears and entire communities are at risk.


The plan:

Make LA one of the easiest cities in the country in which to build housing by speeding approvals and reducing friction

Unlock financing and incentivize local and national large-scale residential development to meet demand faster

Bring average rents down by dramatically increasing the housing supply across Los Angeles



Innovation


Why it matters:

Technology has transformed nearly every aspect of daily life — except City Hall. When government lags behind, residents pay the price in wasted time, inefficiency, and frustration.


The plan:

Automate permits, approvals, and paperwork so residents and businesses aren’t stuck waiting

Improve efficiency of city workers through technology enablement to reduce costs and improve services

Use AI to improve traffic flow and synchronize lights citywide



Vibrancy


Why it matters:

Los Angeles should feel alive, clean, safe, and welcoming — not neglected. Our communal spaces should bring people together as a city. We can restore LA pride.


The plan:

Increase sanitation services and make it easy to report and fix issues quickly

Clean up, improve, and maintain all parks, schools, beaches, and streets across LA

Improve broadband connectivity throughout the city



Economic Mobility


Why it matters:

Talent is everywhere in Los Angeles, but opportunity is not. Without access to education, training, and real job opportunities, too many residents are locked out of economic security.


The plan:

Bring industry — including Hollywood — back to LA to create good jobs

Strengthen education and workforce training using modern technology

Expand internships, apprenticeships, and career pipelines



Safety


Why it matters:

Everyone deserves to feel safe from crime, violence, and disasters — from FIRE and ICE. When emergency response is slow or prevention is weak, trust erodes and lives are put at risk. We need to build a safer, more resilient Los Angeles that responds when it matters most.


The plan:

Put officers back on the streets by reducing administrative burden through automation and modernizing surveillance and investigation techniques

Expand mental health resources and community engagement as a core component of our approach to public safety

Improve climate resiliency and prepare the city for disasters with better planning, equipment, and recovery systems

Strengthen protections for ALL Angelenos

— Adam Miller's campaign website (March 19, 2026)

Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.

See also


External links

Footnotes