Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Karen Bass ripped after suggesting taxpayer-funded dental care for meth users

Mayor Karen Bass drew criticism for suggesting LA taxpayers should fund dental care for homeless meth users who lost their teeth to addiction.


Karen Bass ripped after suggesting taxpayer-funded dental care for meth users

Bass, who is vying in a crowded June primary for a second mayoral term, made the remark during a candidate forum last week on the city's homelessness crisis.

"How many people that you meet that are unhoused don't have teeth at all?" Bass said during an exchange. "They don't have teeth. Why? Because meth rots your teeth."

"You can't succeed without teeth. So there needs to be comprehensive healthcare provided to people," she continued.

Bass's comments sparked an uproar among conservatives, who torched the incumbent's response for appearing to omit any mention of tackling the root causes of the city's homelessness and drug problems.

"A homeless drug addict just tried to stab me," conservative journalist Dustin Grage wrote on the social media platform X, impersonating a Los Angeles resident affected by the city's homeless crisis and drug epidemic. "Karen Bass: 'It's okay, we're going to provide them free teeth so they can be successful now.'"

Former Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Katie Zacharia also criticized Bass for not addressing the underlying drug epidemic in her remarks.

"Symptoms, never the disease," Zacharia wrote.

"Clueless Karen Bass said that the worst part about meth addiction is that it ruins your teeth," former Trump assistant attorney general Theo Wold wrote on X. "To paraphrase Norm MacDonald: Last time I checked, I thought the worst part about meth addiction was meth!"

A spokesperson for Bass did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bass, 72, an establishment Democrat who represented a Los Angeles-based seat in Congress from 2011 to 2022, is facing a competitive re-election challenge from her left and right flank.

Pratt is a registered Republican, though the city's mayoral contest is officially nonpartisan.

The June 2 primary is widely expected to go into a runoff election in which the top two vote-getters would appear on the ballot in November.

you may also like

Cruise ship outbreaks fail to scare off travelers ahead of busy summer season
  • by foxnews
  • descember 09, 2016
Cruise ship outbreaks fail to scare off travelers ahead of busy summer season

Despite recent hantavirus and norovirus outbreaks, cruise demand remains strong, experts say, with over 38 million ocean cruise passengers projected this year.

read more