Former LA Schools Chief Launches Bid To Unseat Karen Bass
Austin Beutner, the one-time head of Los Angeles Unified, announced Monday he will challenge Mayor Karen Bass in the 2026 race. He frames his campaign as a practical response to what he calls a city that needs fixing, not another ideological fight. The announcement landed as many voters are still fed up with rising costs and street disorder.
Beutner, a 65-year-old former investment banker, said in a posted to X that Los Angeles “is adrift.” He also claimed that “after seventeen years in public life,” he has learned how to “get things done.” Those lines set the tone: an outsider-to-politics pitch built on managerial credentials rather than pure rhetoric.
“It seems every day our city is becoming a more expensive, less safe and more difficult place to live,” Beutner said in the video. “The city has spent billions to solve problems that have just become bigger problems: homelessness, the cost of housing, the loss of jobs and opportunity.” That plain talk is designed to land with voters tired of officials who offer sympathy but no fixes.
Beutner’s campaign and Bass’ office did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The opening salvo is already reshaping the conversation in a city where governance and public safety are top concerns for many residents. Expect both sides to dig in quickly as the filing window approaches.
Beutner’s résumé is built on a mix of public service and private-sector heft: he led LAUSD from May 2018 until June 30, 2021 and previously served as a deputy mayor for the city from 2010 to 2013. He has pitched himself as someone able to bridge municipal operations with business discipline. That blend is now central to his argument for replacing a mayor who has drawn criticism from across the political spectrum.
He was named publisher and CEO of the Los Angeles Times in August 2014 but was abruptly fired the following year. At age 29 he became the youngest partner at Blackstone Group and later worked for the U.S. State Department under President Bill Clinton’s administration. Those moves are meant to signal both private-sector success and Washington experience.
The former superintendent once called the district a “model for the nation,” and in 2012 he founded Vision to Learn, a nonprofit that provides “vision screenings, eye exams and glasses to children in low-income communities, at no cost to the children or their families,”. That charitable work gives him a social-service credential many candidates lack. It also complicates a simple partisan read on his entry: he’s not a raw partisan insurgent, he’s a managerial candidate with charitable ties.
Beutner supported Bass in the 2022 Los Angeles mayoral race, a contest she won 53% to 47% over Rick Caruso. That his support has shifted makes this a high-profile intra-city challenge rather than a tidy partisan flip. Observers will watch whether his prior backing of Bass softens her base or stiffens her resolve.
In February Beutner filed a lawsuit alleging LAUSD misused millions intended for arts and music education under Proposition 28, a move that kept him in the public eye after leaving the district. The legal action underscores his willingness to take on local institutions he believes are failing to deliver. For voters focused on oversight and accountability, that posture plays well.
Bass has faced sharp criticism this year over the deadly Palisades fires that swept the region in January and killed 12 people, and authorities arrested 29-year-old Jonathan Rinderknecht on suspicion of starting the blaze. Those tragedies have become part of the wider debate about leadership and emergency response in Los Angeles. Beutner’s entry makes clear he will center those failures in his bid to persuade voters to give him a chance at turning things around.
