Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass entered office with a résumé few elected officials could match. Before becoming Los Angeles’ first woman mayor and only the second Black mayor in the city’s history, Bass served in Congress, chaired the Congressional Black Caucus and spent years in California’s state legislature.

Her decades-long career in public service helped make her one of the most accomplished candidates ever elected to lead the nation’s second-largest city.

Now, after advancing to November’s runoff election following her June 2 primary victory, Bass finds herself at the center of a larger debate about leadership, accountability and the expectations placed on Black elected officials.

Her first term has been defined by tensions over housing affordability, homelessness, public safety and her response to the devastating 2025 wildfires. While critics argue progress has been too slow, Bass has pointed to reductions in street homelessness, declining homicide rates and ongoing rebuilding efforts as evidence that her administration is moving the city forward.

Ahead of the primary, Bass acknowledged the challenges of governing Los Angeles.

“I haven’t always got it right,” she told the Associated Press while defending her administration’s record and arguing that progress has been made despite the scale of the challenges facing the city.

The conversation surrounding Bass speaks to more than dissatisfaction with any single issue. It also raises questions about what voters expect from Black leaders, how elected officials are judged when they inherit decades-old problems and whether political patience is rapidly declining in a polarized era.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass greets customers at Pann’s Restaurant on June 01, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. With one day to go before the California primary, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass continues to campaign across the city | Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

From questions of competence to questions of results

According to Andra Gillespie, an associate professor of political science at Emory University whose research focuses on African American politics and Black political leadership, the conversations surrounding Bass differ from debates that often surrounded earlier generations of Black mayors.

Historically, many Black candidates had to prove they were capable of governing major cities, often confronting biases and assumptions about their qualifications. Those concerns gradually faded as voters watched Black mayors successfully lead their communities and deliver basic city services.

Bass entered office under different circumstances.

“People were not questioning her technical skills,” Gillespie told Blavity, pointing to Bass’ decades of experience in Congress and state government.

Instead, Gillespie said, voters expected a great deal from a leader with Bass’ level of experience and have become frustrated when progress has not matched those expectations.

That distinction speaks to an evolution in how Black leaders are evaluated. For many trailblazing Black elected officials, the challenge was proving they could govern. For leaders like Bass, the challenge is demonstrating results in the face of complex problems that often predate their time in office.

The dynamic became particularly visible after the 2025 wildfires, which intensified scrutiny of Bass’ leadership. The mayor faced backlash over her absence from the city while on an official trip to Ghana when the fires began, as well as concerns about how Los Angeles prepared for and responded to the disaster.

Bass later acknowledged that leaving for the trip had been “a mistake,” telling ABC7 Los Angeles that she would not have traveled had she known the severity of the conditions the city would face.

The incident has remained a recurring theme throughout the campaign. During a recent Instagram Live appearance with Bass, comedian and actor Kathy Griffin criticized Bass’ challenger, former reality TV personality Spencer Pratt, while discussing concerns about policing in Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES, CA - MAY 19: Exterior view of a Spencer Pratt and Karen Bass Mayoral Run Billboard on May 19, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
Exterior view of a Spencer Pratt and Karen Bass Mayoral Run Billboard on May 19, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. | Photo by HIGHFIVE/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Reflecting on the conversation, political reporter Peter Hamby wrote on X that Bass has “the unenviable task of explaining that the mayor of LA isn’t responsible for a lot of problems, but she gets the blame anyway.”

Hamby’s comment highlights a challenge local officials often face: Voters look to mayors for solutions to problems that involve multiple levels of government, decades of policy decisions and forces beyond any one elected official’s control.

The weight of expectation

For LaNiece Jones, chief operating officer and executive director of Black Women Organized for Political Action, public criticism of Bass reflects broader realities facing Black women in elected office.

“Black women are often expected to be both transformational and flawless,” Jones told Blavity.

She argued that Black women leaders are frequently called upon to address deeply rooted challenges while simultaneously facing heightened expectations around performance, visibility and accountability.

Jones said race and gender can also shape how Black women leaders are evaluated, with public assessments sometimes extending beyond policy outcomes to include leadership style, demeanor and presentation.

At the same time, she emphasized that accountability remains essential.

“Democracy depends on informed citizens asking hard questions and demanding results,” Jones said.

However, she argued that fairness requires voters to consider whether leaders have made measurable progress, communicated a clear strategy and inherited problems that developed over decades.

That balance between accountability and expectation sits at the center of Bass’ reelection campaign.

Los Angeles voters are not simply evaluating one crisis or one policy decision. They are weighing years of work on issues such as housing affordability and homelessness while also considering how Bass responded when unexpected challenges emerged.

A new era for Black leadership

Bass’ campaign is also unfolding amid broader shifts in Black political leadership across the country.

Gillespie noted that less than a decade ago, Black women held mayoral offices in several major American cities, including Atlanta, Chicago, San Francisco and New Orleans. Today, many of those leaders have left office, lost reelection bids or moved on from their positions.

At the same time, political coalitions are changing. Gillespie pointed to growing ideological and generational divisions within Democratic politics that are creating new challenges for veteran leaders who were once viewed as political newcomers themselves.

In Los Angeles, those tensions have continued to surface as voters weigh competing visions for how progress should be achieved.

By advancing to the November runoff, Bass has already survived one of the most closely watched mayoral primaries in the country. But the questions raised during the campaign have not disappeared. If anything, they are likely to intensify as voters continue weighing her record against the city’s challenges.

Bass’ reelection campaign reflects the complex expectations placed on elected officials, the challenge of governing through crisis and the evolving conversation about Black leadership in America’s largest cities.

As Jones noted, representation matters, but representation alone is not enough. Black leaders must still govern, deliver results and earn the confidence of voters.

For Bass, that may be the defining challenge of her reelection campaign — and one that extends far beyond Los Angeles.