Trump highlights chaotic scenes from downtown LA as the city prepares to host the Olympics
President Trump shared a video on social media on Sunday showing a woman in downtown Los Angeles using a wrench to pry open a fire hydrant so she could wash her blankets.
As reported by the Daily Mail, the footage, which had already racked up nearly 1.6 million views on Instagram as of Saturday night, came with narration that made the scene impossible to dismiss as anything other than what it was.
The narrator spelled it out plainly:
"This is downtown Los Angeles, California, where Hollywood is at. This is not a movie, though, it's not a joke, and it's not a publicity stunt. This is the reality that people are living in."
Immediately after his initial post, Trump published a follow-up on Truth Social, attaching a screenshot from a user on X who wrote, "Los Angeles fire hydrants seem to be working just fine now."
The callback was unmistakable.
From fire hydrant failures to fire hydrant laundromats
Last January, as the Palisades fire raged across the county and consumed upwards of a thousand buildings, Trump called out California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Truth Social, blaming "Governor Gavin Newscum" for "no water for fire hydrants." At the time, the criticism landed hard because it was grounded in observable reality: hydrants failed when Angelenos needed them most.
Newsom ordered an investigation into why some fire hydrants were unusable. The LA Department of Water and Power insisted they never ran out of water, though they acknowledged that demand surged to roughly four times normal usage. Newsom said he wanted "answers to how that happened."
That was over a year ago. The answers, if they ever came, clearly didn't fix the underlying rot. The hydrants work now, apparently. Just not for firefighting. For washing blankets on a public sidewalk.
The Olympic city
Los Angeles is set to host some FIFA World Cup matches this summer and the 2028 Summer Olympics. Let that context settle over the video Trump shared. One social media user captured the dissonance perfectly:
"Los Angeles, supposed to host the OLYMPICS in 2028, now has fire hydrants turning into where homeless and poor people wash their clothes."
Another asked the question that city leaders seem determined not to answer: "How can Los Angeles host the Olympics when we have people living on the streets?"
Others responded with the gallows humor that has become the default register for anyone watching California governance. "Surprised to see a working fire hydrant," one wrote. "At least there's water in the hydrants!!!!!" added another.
The joke writes itself. During an actual emergency, the hydrants were dry. During an ordinary Sunday, they're open-air laundry facilities. This is what one-party rule produces: a city that cannot perform basic functions under pressure but offers boundless dysfunction in peacetime.
Bass, Pratt, and a Democratic Socialist walk into a primary
The political backdrop makes the optics even worse. LA Mayor Karen Bass is facing a primary election in June, and her approval rating has declined following her handling of the Palisades fire. In a UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs survey, Bass received just 25 percent support. In second place, with 11 percent: former reality TV personality Spencer Pratt, whose political career follows years on television, including "The Hills," where he met his wife Heidi Montag. A city councilmember who belongs to the Democratic Socialists of America, Nithya Raman, came in a close third with nine percent.
A UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll of 840 likely voters, conducted between March 9 and 15, told a slightly different story. Bass still led with 25 percent, but Raman climbed to second at 17 percent, with Pratt at 14 percent.
So the incumbent mayor of America's second-largest city can't break above a quarter of her own electorate, and her most credible challengers are a reality TV star and a Democratic Socialist. Raman's candidacy has been compared to Zohran Mamdani's in New York City, which ended with him elected as the Big Apple's mayor.
This is the bench that Democratic governance produces in major American cities. Not serious reformers running on accountability and competence, but celebrity candidates and ideologues running to the left of leaders who already failed.
A city that can't hide anymore
California's leaders have spent years insisting that their model works. The homelessness crisis is always being "addressed." The infrastructure is always being "invested in." The problems are always someone else's fault, usually the federal government's, usually a Republican's.
But a video of a woman cracking open a fire hydrant with a wrench on a downtown street doesn't require partisan interpretation. It doesn't need a fact-check or a rebuttal from a press secretary. It just sits there, 1.6 million views deep, showing people what the most powerful state in the union has made of its largest city.
As one commenter put it simply: "Gavin is a FAILURE."
Three hundred and seventy-seven comments on Trump's post. Nearly all of them said some version of the same thing: nothing has changed. The Olympics arrive in two years. The World Cup arrives this summer. The world will be watching Los Angeles.
Right now, Los Angeles is washing its blankets in the street.




