Sure. On her first day in office, she declared a homelessness emergency and launched the $300 million "Inside Safe" program. While this initiative reduced street homelessness by 18% and moved thousands indoors, encampments remain stubbornly visible and 40% of participants eventually returned to the streets. She also tackled housing affordability by fast-tracking over 18,000 units through Executive Directive 1—which was later made permanent—and capping annual rent hikes between 1% and 4%. On public safety, she oversaw a historic drop in violent crime, with homicides falling by 28% and gang-related killings dropping by over half, alongside the expansion of the unarmed CIRCLE crisis response program. However, despite successfully navigating a $1 billion budget deficit without executing proposed mass layoffs, her administration faced severe political fallout for her absence during the January 2025 wildfires and a subsequent scapegoating lawsuit from the former Fire Chief, leaving overall resident satisfaction at a decade low. She came through on her biggest promises, but hasn't really changed the overall quality of life for most LA residents.