MLB power rankings: As the 2026 season begins, can anybody keep up with the Dodgers?

Opening Day is around the corner, less than a week away. Every club, at least for now, is undefeated, their record unblemished, their highest hopes undashed.

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But while no games have been played, not all 30 teams are created equal. Let's do some ranking.

Jump to a team by clicking on the links below:

30. Colorado Rockies

The 2026 Rockies should be better than the 2025 Rockies, but the 2026 Rockies might still be worse than every other ballclub. Colorado's disastrous season precipitated a long overdue front-office overhaul. That new direction won't reorient the big-league team's fortunes this season, but it'll be interesting to see if there are any legitimate signs of improvement. Keep an eye on starting pitcher Chase Dollander, the most talented arm in the organization. If he takes steps forward, that's a huge deal for Colorado and a positive harbinger.

29. Chicago White Sox

At least they have the pope on their side. Chicago had a fun offseason; Munetaka Murakami is exactly the type of high-risk, high-reward hitter bad teams should be targeting. Yet this is still a team years away from seriously contending. This season will be all about figuring out which position players have a chance to be on the next good White Sox club. Good thing there's a lot of them to sift through.

28. Los Angeles Angels

What a pointless endeavor the Angels have become, the epitome of trying the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. New manager Kurt Suzuki is on a one-year deal, which doesn't exactly inspire confidence in the project. Zach Neto is really, really good, but he might be the only player on this roster who is really, really good. Hopefully Mike Trout can stay healthy.

27. Washington Nationals

This pitching staff could be historically bad, but look on the bright side: At least they have technology now! After years of living in the baseball stone ages, the new Nationals front office has embraced modern technology. The results might not show up immediately, but things do appear to be headed in the right direction. Offensively, this unit has a chance to be pretty good. James Wood is special, CJ Abrams is a borderline All-Star, and Dylan Crews and Brady House are talented youngsters with something to prove. The Nats won't win the World Series, but there's a new day dawning in D.C.

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26. Minnesota Twins

Minnesota traded away its entire bullpen (and Carlos Correa) at last year's deadline in what appeared to be the embracing of a rebuild. But this winter, the Twins changed course, opting to hold on to pieces such as Pablo Lopez, Byron Buxton, Joe Ryan and Ryan Jeffers. The AL Central could be weak enough that Minnesota hangs around longer than people expect, and this roster definitely doesn't suck, but it's hard to see a team with such a lengthy injury history making a real run at October.

25. St. Louis Cardinals

The Cardinals did a ton of subtracting over the winter, parting ways with veterans Nolan Arenado, Sonny Gray, Willson Contreras and Brendan Donovan. New president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom clearly has a vision, but one that might take a few years to actualize at the big-league level. This pitching staff, as currently constructed, looks like a weak spot, but there are some interesting upper-level arms on the precipice of helping in St. Louis. Whether the Cards can finally unlock talented young bats such as Jordan Walker, Masyn Winn, Victor Scott II and Nolan Gorman will be the litmus test for their season.

24. Miami Marlins

The 2025 Marlins played over their heads a little bit. As fun as that team was, it's tough to envision Miami pulling that off again without any massive additions. Owen Caissie, acquired from Chicago in the Edward Cabrera deal, should help right away, but he's a boom-or-bust type who might need some time to adjust to the bigs. If Miami can simply match its win total from last season, that would be a huge success. Getting Sandy Alcantarra back on track has to be priority No. 1.

23. Tampa Bay Rays

It feels like this franchise is in a full holding pattern until a new stadium gets built. Junior Caminero is a superstar, but does Tampa Bay have anything with which to support him? Is there another 4.0-WAR position player anywhere in this organization? It doesn't seem like it. Shortstop Carson Williams, a sparkling defender, could be that guy if he fixes his big swing-and-miss issues. Otherwise, it's slim pickings. That said, the Rays' rotation should be better than it was last year, especially if Shane McClanahan is truly back from his long injury detour.

22. Athletics

Do you like runs? Well, the A's are about to score and surrender quite a few. This lineup is electrifying and has some of the best young hitters in the sport. A full season of Nick Kurtz should be exhilarating. This pitching staff, however, leaves much to be desired. Luis Severino looked great in the WBC but has yet to show that form in green and gold. An offseason impact starting pitching addition — say, Zac Gallen, Framber Valdez or Ranger Suarez — would've done wonders for this club.

21. Cincinnati Reds

Hunter Greene being out for the first few months of the seasonis a big, big deal. The Reds have a host of talented arms to weather the storm — keep an eye on Chase Burns — but Greene is pretty irreplaceable. On the offensive front, it's all about Elly De La Cruz. The unicorn shortstop was squarely mediocre from a production standpoint last season. This team needs him to go super saiyan, establishing himself as an MVP contender, if it's going to have a chance to return to October.

20. Texas Rangers

Texas had the lowest ERA in baseball last year, and it didn't matter one bit. And that pitching unit, talented it might be, is due for some regression. For all the famous names in this lineup, Texas' offense has been straight-up bad the past two seasons since winning the 2023 World Series. New manager Skip Schumaker is highly respected and should provide a jolt of energy, but the Rangers just need to hit.

19. Cleveland Guardians

A heroic, late-summer run handed Cleveland an improbable AL Central title last year, but this organization did very, very little over the winter to supplement a roster that was pretty mediocre for much of the season. The Guardians are counting on a handful of young hitters — Chase DeLauter, George Valera, Bo Naylor, CJ Kayfus, Travis Bazzana — to develop into impact players. Perhaps some of those names do break out, but it's hard to envision a Cleveland hitter not named José Ramirez making the 2026 All-Star team.

18. San Francisco Giants

How new manager Tony Vitello makes the leap from college to the pros will be one of the more fascinating storylines of the entire MLB season. How that manifests on the field, though, will be difficult to assess. The Giants simply might not have enough talent for any manager to lead them to the promised land. San Francisco's rotation looks particularly shallow, though perhaps an improved defensive unit and one of the more pitcher-friendly parks in the game will be enough.

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How high up the rankings will Paul Skenes and the Pirates climb this year? Can Aaron Judge and the Yankees keep up with Shohei Ohtani and the Dodgers?

17. Arizona Diamondbacks

Arizona just needs to tread water for the first month of the season until ace Corbin Burnes returns from Tommy John surgery. This pitching staff doesn't inspire oodles of confidence, but at least Arizona's offense is good enough to win a bunch of 7-6 games.Corbin Carroll's hamate surgery is a big storylinejust because it typically takes guys some time to rediscover their power stroke after coming back from that injury.

16. Pittsburgh Pirates

A popular dark-horse pick right now, Pittsburgh is coming off one of the most punchless offensive team seasons in recent history. Thankfully, the Pirates have four new main characters taking the stage: three offseason additions (Ryan O'Hearn, Marcell Ozuna and Brandon Lowe) andone top-prospect phenom in Konnor Griffin. Whether or not Griffin makes the team out of camp, the 19-year-old supernova should be up for most of the season. It's a lot of pressure to put on a literal teenager, but Paul Skenes and this strong pitching staff need all the help they can get.

15. San Diego Padres

Offensive starpower be damned, this roster scares the heck out of me. Despite the combo of Fernando Tatis Jr., Jackson Merrill, Manny Machado and Xander Bogaerts, the Padres finished third-to-last in baseball in home runs last year. Add a very top-heavy pitching rotation — Randy Vásquez, Germán Márquez and Walker Buehler are the 3, 4 and 5 starters — and this organization looks to be balancing on something of a tightrope.

14. Houston Astros

The much-predicted offseason trade never happened, which means the pieces on this roster still don't all fit together. Jeremy Peña starting the year on the IL might simplify Houston's defensive alignment coming out of the gate, but finding enough at-bats for all the veteran infielders might prove difficult. But none of that is as important as Yordan Alvarez's health. The gargantuan slugger played in just 48 games last season, and the Astros still almost won the division. The future is not particularly bright in Houston — this farm system stinks — but the Astros still have enough talent to return to October.

13. Atlanta Braves

If the Braves stay healthy, they should be pretty good. Unfortunately, they're already not healthy, with Sean Murphy, Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrepstarting the season on the injured list.Losing Jurickson Profar to another PED suspension doesn't help, either. Can the top of this roster — Ronald Acuña Jr., Chris Sale, Austin Riley, Matt Olson and Spencer Strider — perform at a high enough level to make up for the injury woes and lack of depth?

12. Kansas City Royals

Speaking of a lack of depth, the Royals are shallower than a kiddie pool. Thankfully, the high-end talent here is pretty incredible. Bobby Witt Jr. is the third-best player in the world. Maikel Garcia and Vinnie Pasquantino should be All-Stars. Carter Jensen is a fun Rookie of the Year pick. A healthy Cole Ragans could be an X-factor. If Kansas City can dodge the injury bug, it'll have a good shot at the AL Central crown.

11. Detroit Tigers

If this is Tarik Skubal's final season in Detroit, well, let's hope the Tigers go down swinging. Adding Framber Valdez to the rotation was a reassuring development, but this offense is still lacking a true difference-maker. Maybe that's Kevin McGonigle, one of the top prospects in baseball, who could make the team out of spring training. If he hits the ground running, watch out.

10. Chicago Cubs

Swapping in Alex Bregman for Kyle Tucker is a vibes upgrade but a production downgrade. Where else can Chicago make up the difference? Maybe on the pitching front, where offseason trade acquisition Edward Cabrera enters the season with tons of hype. Which Pete Crow-Armstrong shows up — the first-half MVP candidate or the second-half struggler? — will play a huge role in dictating how this Cubs season turns out.

9. Milwaukee Brewers

Can they really keep getting away with this? After leading MLB in wins, the Brewers dealt away their best pitcher (Freddy Peralta) and two every-day position players (Caleb Durbin, Isaac Collins). A full-bore breakout from youngster Jackson Chourio would counteract those losses. So, too, would a full, dominant season from Jacob Misiorowski. No team has more young talent than Milwaukee, so even though they seem like smoke and mirrors at times, the Brewers are a good choice to repeat as NL Central champs.

8. Baltimore Orioles

How did things get so ugly for the 2025 O's? Bad starting pitching and position-player injuries. Baltimore solved the first problem by acquiring Chris Bassitt and Shane Baz to go alongside a back-from-injury Kyle Bradish and out-of-nowhere-breakout Trevor Rogers. The second problem is a little trickier. Adding Pete Alonso, one of the game's most durable position players, will help a lot. But spring training injuries to Jackson Holliday and Jordan Westburg don't exactly put the worrywarts at ease. In the end, however, the entire operation probably comes down to Adley Rutschman and Gunnar Henderson.

7. Boston Red Sox

The more I look at this roster, the more I like it. There are some perplexing dynamics, some pieces that don't mesh, some hitters with question marks, but in the main, Boston has assembled an interesting group. A disproportionate amount of pressure will be placed on the shoulders of young Roman Anthony, but as he showed in the WBC, Anthony is a special hitter capable of carrying that type of load. He'll need some help from his supporting cast, which makes Willson Contreras, Trevor Story and Wilyer Abreu absolutely crucial to Boston's season.

6. Toronto Blue Jays

This lineup, inches from a World Series victory in November, will probably be worse than it was last season. Some of that is because of Bo Bichette's departure, but it's also difficult to see characters such as George Springer, Davis Schneider and Daulton Varsho delivering such productive offensive campaigns again. The arrival of Kazuma Okamoto could help bridge that gap, but there are enough injuries on the pitching side to feel a bit more cautious than the consensus regarding the defending American League champs.

5. New York Mets

It was quite the whirlwind winter for the Mets, who overhauled nearly half their big-league roster and said goodbye to a whole host of franchise stalwarts. The end result, however, is pretty encouraging. Freddy Peralta is a bona fide ace. Bo Bichette rakes and should be able to handle third base. Luis Robert Jr. retains stupid levels of upside in center field. Jorge Polanco will raise the offense's floor. Those newcomers should pair wonderfully with Juan Soto, Nolan McLean, Francisco Lindor and the rest to propel New York back to October.

4. Philadelphia Phillies

One day, perhaps soon, this Phillies window will close. The core of Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, Zack Wheeler and Co. certainly isn't getting any younger. But while this roster is dangerously devoid of depth, there are enough high-end, impact characters on both sides of the ball to keep the Phillies in contention for at least another 365 days. A pair of rookies in Justin Crawford (outfield) and Andrew Painter (rotation) will have a big say as to whether this is a wild-card team or a division champ.

3. New York Yankees

The Yankees got a lot of flack for opting to run things back in 2026 with a nearly unchanged roster, but I think it's a pretty defensible strategy ,considering how good this team was last season. Mix in a full season of starter Cam Schlittler, an Austin Wells bounce-back, another Ben Rice breakout and the underrated addition of Ryan Weathers, and the Yanks start to look like a strong World Series contender. They also, by the way,employ the best hitter on Earth.

2. Seattle Mariners

Could theWorld Baseball Classic handshake drama surrounding Cal Raleightailspin Seattle's season into a tornado of messy clubhouse drama?! I'm not buying it. That's not really how baseball works, and this team is too dang talented to let something as trivial as a fistbump slight derail its plans. The Mariners, who were one win away from their first World Series appearance last year, got better in the offseason with the addition of Brendan Donovan. Some regression is inevitable for Raleigh, but a long-awaited, full-blast season from Julio Rodriguez could make up the difference.

1. Los Angeles Dodgers

Will the Dodgers win the most regular-season games in 2026? Probably not, but that's not their goal. This isn't the Premier League. For L.A., the regular season is merely a warm-up for the playoffs, through which the Dodgers appear primed to stampede once again. The two-time defending champs got resoundingly better over the winter, adding both the best hitter (Kyle Tucker) and the best closer (Edwin Díaz) on the free-agent market. A million things could happen between now and October, but there is no stronger playoff lock than the Dodgers.

MLB power rankings: As the 2026 season begins, can anybody keep up with the Dodgers?

Opening Day is around the corner, less than a week away. Every club, at least for now, is undefeated, their record unblem...
Santa Clara coach rips refs after Kentucky stunner in NCAA tournament: 'I unequivocally called timeout'

Seconds after Allen Graves' go-ahead 3-pointer put Santa Clara ahead by three points with 2.1 seconds left in regulation, Herb Sendek recognized the need to stop play and set his team's defense before Kentucky could inbound the ball.

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Sendek raced down the sideline signaling for a timeout as referee Todd Austin ran ahead of him in the same direction with his back turned to the Santa Clara coach.

What happened next on Friday afternoon will live forever — in Sendek's nightmares and inNCAA tournamentlore. Kentucky's Otega Oweh received the inbound pass on the run, charged up court and banked in a game-tying 32-footer as the buzzer sounded, sending a thrilling first-round NCAA tournament classic to overtime and paving the way forseventh-seeded Kentucky to escape with an 89-84 victory.

When asked about the sequence by reporters after the game, Sendek said, "I unequivocally called timeout, but they didn't grant it."

"I mean, I think the video evidence is clear," Sendek continued. "And anybody's able to pull it up. Which is a likely response after Allen hits the 3 that the coach would be calling timeout to set the defense, which I tried to do and was successful in doing other than that it wasn't acknowledged or recognized."

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The video evidence shows Sendek hesitates briefly after Graves' 3-pointer but does begin signaling for a timeout just before Kentucky gets the ball inbounds. The referee on the far side of the floor appears to be looking right at Sendek but opts to allow the play to continue rather than awarding Sendek the timeout.

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Mar 20, 2026; St. Louis, MO, USA; Santa Clara Broncos forward Allen Graves (22) reacts after making a basket against Kentucky Wildcats center Malachi Moreno (24) during the second half of a first round game of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Enterprise Center.  Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

As former Santa Clara coach Kerry Keatingpointed out on social media, Sendek also could have increased his chances of getting the timeout had he been positioned differently.

"Make sure you are standing as close to half court as possible, NOT at the end of your bench," Keating wrote in a "pro tip" to young coaches. "Refs can't see you when the ball is past you!"

Had Santa Clara been able to stop play and set its defense, Sendek might have instructed his players to foul intentionally rather than giving Kentucky a look at a game-tying 3-pointer. Santa Clara forward Elijah Mahi admitted later that "there was just so much going on in those last seconds" that the Broncos players on the floor didn't even consider that possibility.

Oweh, a player with a long history of late-game heroics, made Santa Clara pay for giving him the chance to extend the game. When he raced down court, he pulled up right beside Kentucky head coach Mark Pope. As the ball left Oweh's fingertips, Pope said he heard his star guard say, "That's a bucket!"

Oweh led Kentucky with 35 points, including a pair of game-tying baskets in the final seconds of regulation. His ability to get to the rim put Kentucky in a position to win the game, as did the shot blocking and interior defense of center Brandon Garrison.

While Kentucky moves on to face the winner of Iowa State-Tennessee State, Santa Clara heads home after its first NCAA tournament appearance in 30 years. The Broncos can take pride in pushing a blue blood to the brink of an early exit but they'll also have to live with the sour taste of knowing the outcome might have been different if Sendek's timeout were granted.

"It was a really euphoric high," Sendek said, "followed by a tough one to swallow."

Santa Clara coach rips refs after Kentucky stunner in NCAA tournament: 'I unequivocally called timeout'

Seconds after Allen Graves' go-ahead 3-pointer put Santa Clara ahead by three points with 2.1 seconds left in regulat...
Tennessee Lady Vols end season with their first 8-game losing streak in NCAA era

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Tennessee barely extended its streak of March Madness appearance and the Lady Vols' trip to the NCAA Tournament didn't last very long.

Associated Press Tennessee coach Kim Caldwell walks off the court following a loss to North Carolina State in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Friday, March 20, 2026, in Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Al Goldis) North Carolina State guard Zamareya Jones, left, and Tennessee guard Talaysia Cooper vie for a loose ball during the second half in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Friday, March 20, 2026, in Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)

NCAA Tennessee NC State Basketball

No. 7 North Carolina State ended the 10th-seeded Lady Vols' season with a 76-61 victory in the first round Friday night.

Tennessee which has played in every NCAA Tournament since its creation in 1982 had only been knocked out twice previously in the first game of the tourney – in 2009 by Ball State and in 2019 by UCLA.

"Really not the season we wanted, but it doesn't really help us to get into that right now," said second-year Tennessee coach Kim Caldwell when asked about what happened this season. "Trying to enjoy our seniors for the last little bit that we have them."

It was an uncharacteristic season for the Lady Vols (16-14), who closed the year with the school's first eight-game losing streak in the modern era and went winless in March. Their last victory was Feb. 12 against Missouri.

"It was the worst year of my professional career," Caldwell said. "Our players deserve better than that from me, and you learn from that going forward.

"There was never clear leadership on my part of hey, this is exactly what we're going to do. This is why we're going to do it. We never got consistent rotations."

Players, some with tears in their eyes, expressed their disappointment of how the year ended.

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"Of course it sucks to lose any game, but this game our season is over and it sucks even more," said Tennessee junior forward Alyssa Latham. "We tried our best today to extend our season but it didn't go the way we wanted to."

Pat Summitt, who won eight NCAA championships with the Lady Vols, had 23 seasons with six or less losses. This year's team equaled the most defeats since the 2015-16 season and had the fewest wins for an at-large team since 2018, which led to Tennessee's worst seeding since 2019.

The Lady Vols fell behind by 19-4 early in the game and clawed back to within 48-46 late in the third quarter but that was as close as they could get the rest of the way.

"We just had a rough patch," said senior Zee Spearman. "We just couldn't get out of it. Honestly, we tried our best. But at the end of the day, this didn't work out the way we wanted it to."

On the eve of their first-round game, Caldwell called out her players and staff.

"Our players are very spoiled," Caldwell said. "Our coaching staff is very spoiled. The way we do things is first class, it's high class. It's really remarkable at how quickly anyone can get spoiled and used to it."

AP March Madness bracket:https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracketand coverage:https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Tennessee Lady Vols end season with their first 8-game losing streak in NCAA era

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Tennessee barely extended its streak of March Madness appearance and the Lady Vols' trip to t...
AIPAC-aligned super PACs spent millions in Illinois Democratic primaries

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee's super PAC seeded two anonymous groups that spent more than $14 million to influencepivotal House Democratic primaries in Illinoison Tuesday — marking a new salvo in the battle over policy on Israel within the Democratic Party.

NBC Universal Daniel Biss (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

United Democracy Project, a super PAC aligned with AIPAC that receives tens of millions of dollars from the group, openly spent another $5 million to boost Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin in her unsuccessful campaign for the state's 7th Congressional District. But its involvement in the two other groups — Elect Chicago Women and Affordable Chicago Now! — had not been officially confirmed until Friday, when newly filed federal fundraising reports showed that UDP contributed $5.3 million of the $14.1 million the groups raised.

Donors who had previously contributed to UDP gave the groups millions more.

Altogether, the three super PACs accounted for 60% of all of the outside spending in Illinois House primaries this year. And while progressives had accused the pro-Israel group of being behind the spending, those direct ties were not confirmed until days after voters went to the polls.

"UDP was happy to support these local committees, along with Chicago donors, to make sure pro-Israel voices would have their voices heard," Patrick Dorton, a UDP spokesman, told NBC News on Friday. "Like many other groups, we are using a number of different tools to engage in races this cycle,"

"At the end of the day, AIPAC is focused on making sure we have the largest, bipartisan pro-Israel majority in Congress," Dorton continued, later adding: "By any measure the Chicago delegation is more pro-Israel today than it was before the primary election."

The shielded spending and recent election results comeamid a sea changein how American voters — especially Democratic voters — view Israel. Recent NBC News polling found two-thirds of Democrats say their sympathies lie more with the Palestinians than Israelis, and a majority of Democrats have a negative view of Israel broadly.

The combined pro-Israel effortwas victorious in two races Tuesday, with former Rep. Melissa Bean and Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller winning a pair of crowded primaries. Both Democratic fields included progressives who had taken more critical approaches to U.S. policy toward Israel.

US-NEWS-ILLCONGRESS-ASSESS-TB (Talia Sprague / Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The AIPAC-backed effort failed in two other districts, with state Rep. La Shawn Ford narrowly defeating Conyears-Ervin in one primary, while Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss won the highest-profile and most contentious of the races, which exposed deep Democratic divisions on the issue.

Elect Chicago Women spent more than $5 million in that race, first to support state Sen. Laura Fine and then to attack Biss, who is Jewish, has criticized the Israeli government and calls himself a "progressive Zionist."

When Biss proved to be a durable opponent, the spending against him ultimately stopped. A different group, Chicago Progressive Partnership, began trying to cut down a surging progressive candidate, Kat Abughazaleh, and then boosting another low-polling progressive, Bushra Amiwala, in an apparent attempt to split the progressive vote. BothAbughazalehandAmiwalahave been deeply critical of Israel and have referred to Israel's conduct in Gaza as "genocide."

Kat Abughazaleh (Nam Y. Huh / AP)

Chicago Progressive Partnership had not yet filed its February campaign finance report as of late Friday.

Biss specifically raised the issue of Israel policy in his victory speech, arguing that his campaign understood the "nuance and complexity" of the complicated issues around Israel and pushed back on pressure from groups like AIPAC.

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"AIPAC found out the hard way: The 9th District is not for sale," Biss said.

Usamah Andrabi, the communications director at the progressive group Justice Democrats, joined a parade of progressives celebrating Biss and Ford's victories and framing them as a repudiation of AIPAC's tactics and views.

"If 'being pro-Israel was good politics or policy', like AIPAC says, they wouldn't have to completely avoid mentioning Israel in $21 million of ads and using shell PACs to hide their spending," Andrabi said in a statement.

Dorton, the UDP spokesman, pushed back against that framing. He argued that "no candidate who made AIPAC or Israel a centerpiece of their campaign won in Chicago, with the exception of Biss," whom Dorton cast as acceptable — despite the AIPAC groups' massive spending to try to cut him down weeks ago.

"Obviously we have our differences with Daniel Biss but at least he's a Zionist — and he's far better than Kat Abughazaleh," Dorton said.

"We are going to use every tool in the toolbox to try to get the best possible, pro-Israel results," Dorton continued. "Sometimes it means we'll have an extremely pro-Israel candidate, but in these multi-candidate fields, sometimes it'll be a pretty good candidate that we can live with."

The split decision has left both sides emboldened as primary season continues to develop. But new polling showsIsrael's standing among Democrats has slipped dramaticallyin recent years, and criticism of AIPAC spending issurfacing in primaries across the country— including those where pro-Israel groups are not playing.

Meanwhile, many prominent Democratic politicians are getting more comfortable distancing themselves from AIPAC or questioning America's aid to Israel.

During an appearance on a"Crooked Media" podcast earlier this month, California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's governance is "walking us down that path where I don't think you have a choice" but to rethink U.S. military support for the country. This week, Illinois Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, who is Jewish, toldThe Associated Pressthat he sees AIPAC as "an organization that was supporting Donald Trump," adding "AIPAC really is not an organization that I think today I would want any part of."

Jim Kessler, the executive vice president for policy at Third Way, a think tank aligned with Democratic moderates, told NBC News thatAIPAC's involvement in a special House election in New Jerseyearlier this year was a "watershed moment" for centrist Democrats like him who believe AIPAC spending directly led to the election of "someone far to the left on every issue."

In that race, the AIPAC super PAC attacked former Rep. Tom Malinowski for considering conditions on aid to Israel, which helped progressive activist Analilia Mejia, who is far more critical of Israel, win the Democratic primary.

"There's this rift that's been growing for a while, but what happens when there's one election on one day, instead of November when there are elections all across the country, this New Jersey race was a real, crystalizing moment that their influence is unhelpful," Kessler said, adding that AIPAC is "maneuvering themselves out of the Democratic Party" given the organization's alignment with the pro-Trump Netanyahu government.

"The existence of Israel, the safety of the Jewish people, is not helped when the main lobbying group for the country is seen as against one party," he said.

Asked about that criticism of AIPAC from Democrats of different stripes, Dorton said that while he wouldn't respond to individual criticism: "We represent millions of pro-Israel Democrats, we are undeterred," he said. "We are going to continue to use all the tools at our disposal to make sure a pro-Israel Democratic voice is represented."

AIPAC-aligned super PACs spent millions in Illinois Democratic primaries

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee's super PAC seeded two anonymous groups that spent more than $14 million...
Departed counterterrorism official who resigned over Iran war denies leaking classified documents

Joe Kent, the former counterterrorism director whoresigned this weekin protest of theIran war, on Friday denied allegations that he improperly shared classified information.

Associated Press

The Associated Press reported that theFBI is investigatingwhether Kent leaked such information, citing someone familiar with the matter. The person said the investigation preceded his resignation on Tuesday. No additional details were available.

"As for the leak allegations, I'm not concerned because I know I did nothing wrong," Kent said on SiriusXM's "The Megyn Kelly Show." He suggested he was targeted because he spoke out.

"I am concerned because we've all seen the FBI and the full weight of the government come down on individuals who speak out," Kent said.

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The Justice Department has undertaken several probes into perceived political foes of President Donald Trump, including former FBI Director James Comey, although prosecutors have struggled to make charges stick.

Kent, the director of the U.S. government's National Counterterrorism Center, stepped down Tuesday saying he "cannot in good conscience" support the Trump administration's war in Iran.

"Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due topressure from Israeland its powerful American lobby," Kent wrote on X.

Trump later told reporters that he always thought Kent was "weak on security" and if someone in his administration did not believe Iran was a threat, "we don't want those people." Other Trump administration officials, including CIA Director John Ratcliffe, have since sought to distance themselves from Kent and his assessment.

Departed counterterrorism official who resigned over Iran war denies leaking classified documents

Joe Kent, the former counterterrorism director whoresigned this weekin protest of theIran war, on Friday denied allegatio...

 

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