Influencer Trisha Paytas is eyeing a wild pivot into politics, spilling in a new YouTube video that she'd love to run for a U.S. House seat in California. The 37-year-old mom of three cited her growing concerns about the world as motivation for the potential leap. Is this the tea on her next chapter?
Hold onto your mukbangs, because Trisha Paytas just dropped a bombshell that's got everyone side-eyeing her next move. On Monday, January 5, the queen of chaotic YouTube content uploaded a video titled “2026 MANIFESTATIONS,” where she straight-up confessed she'd “would love to run” for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in California—the state she calls home with hubby Moses Hacmon and their three kiddos.
“I know, it sounds so crazy to me, too,” Trisha admitted in the vid. “I really want to be able to truly make a difference because I see so much horrible stuff happening in the world — and happening right here in California as well.” Later that same day, she hopped on TikTok to dish more, revealing she's “currently Googling” how to even launch a campaign. The idea? It hit her like a divine download. “The idea of me being representative for the state of California came to me in a dream — in a vision, if you will,” she shared. “It’s so vivid to me.” 🔥
Motherhood flipped the script for Trisha, who welcomed her first child in 2022. “I never thought of myself as a political person until I started having kids and realizing, like, the world could be just so disastrous [and] dystopian for real by the time they get to be adults,” she explained. “I was like, ‘Alright Trish, enough just, like, shutting it out, being ignorant.'” Her big policy push? Bumping the age limit for adult entertainment work to 25. And that slogan? “California could be good.” As she put it, “It could be good. Just need to figure out a better system for everyone and everything.”
Trisha wouldn't be the first celeb to trade red carpets for Capitol Hill, but can you imagine the hearings? Messy, iconic, and probably viral. So, is Trisha about to serve real legislation, or is this just another manifestation gone wild?