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The Edmonton Oilers will be without their top two players this week, with coach Kris Knoblauch saying Monday it’s ‘still going to be awhile’ before Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl return from injuries.

McDavid, a three-time MVP, and Draisaitl sat out Saturday’s contest after being injured in separate games last week. Draisaitl, the NHL’s top goal scorer, has missed two games. The Oilers have three games this week.

‘We’re going to play a couple games without them at least,’ Knoblauch said.

The Oilers, who reached Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final last season, are tied for second in the Pacific Division, five points behind the Vegas Golden Knights. The Los Angeles Kings, who have a game in hand, and Edmonton have 87 pointts.

Here is the latest on the injured Oilers stars:

Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl injury update

Knoblauch said McDavid wouldn’t play this week. He was hurt Thursday night after he appeared to catch a stick from Josh Morrissey as he skated around the Winnipeg Jets defenseman.

Counting Saturday, McDavid has missed seven games this season – three for an ankle injury and three to a suspension.

Knoblauch added that Draisaitl isn’t ‘day-to-day yet.’ He sat out Thursday’s game after suffering an undisclosed injury in a March 18 game.

The Oilers won Saturday’s game against the Seattle Kraken behind a Ryan Nugent-Hopkins hat trick. Edmonton plays the Dallas Stars, Seattle Kraken and Calgary Flames this week.

‘In the short term, it’s harder for us to win games and move up in the standings … but collectively for our team, we want to be at our best for the playoffs,’ Knoblauch said, adding, ‘This little break without having those two, maybe that helps other guys find their games and step it up.’

Connor McDavid stats

McDavid ranks fourth in the league with 90 points. He has 26 goals and 64 assists.

Leon Draisaitl stats

Draisaitl leads the league with 49 goals and is second with 101 points.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The No. 2 NC State women’s basketball team hosted No. 7 Michigan State today in the second round of the 2025 NCAA Tournament.

The Wolfpack were seeking their 17th appearance in the Sweet 16 and sixth under coach Wes Moore. They boasted a 22-game home winning streak heading into this game, with Aziaha James averaging 17.8 points per game.

The Spartans, meanwhile, were chasing their fourth Sweet 16 appearance in program history and haven’t been since 2009. Forward Grace VanSlooten was someone to watch, averaging 15.5 points per game with six double-doubles this year coming into the contest.

Here’s highlights and the final score from NC State vs. Michigan State:

FINAL: NC State 83, Michigan State 49

NC State came up big in this game, dominating the Spartans to the tune of a 34-point victory.

Aziaha James led all scorers with 26 for the Wolfpack. The Wolfpack ended up with four players scoring in double digits. Michigan State only mustered one − Grace VanSlooten (15). NC State also dominated on the glass, corralling 35 boards to Sparty’s 23.

The real difference however, was three-point shooting. NC State was red-hot from beyond the arc, hitting 50% of their threes on 30 attempts. On three-pointers alone, NC State almost scored enough to defeat the Spartans. Meanwhile, Michigan State attempted half as many three-pointers and were nearly half as efficient, hitting just four long-range shots for the entire game. James alone (6-of-11 from three) hit more three-pointers than the entire Spartans’ team (4-of-15).

NC State vs. Michigan State highlights:

Watch NC State vs. Michigan State: Time, TV channel, live stream

Game Day: Monday, March 24, 2025
Game Time: Noon ET
Location: Reynolds Collesium in Raleigh, North Carolina
TV Channel: ESPN
Live Stream: Fubo – Watch Now!

Watch NC State vs Michigan State live on Fubo (free trial)

NC State vs. Michigan State odds

Odds via BetMGM as of Sunday, March 23.

Spread: NC State -6.5
Moneyline Favorite: NC State -275
Moneyline Underdog: Michigan State +220
Total: 153.5

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We’ve seen 68 teams trimmed to 64, 64 teams cut to 32 and now, with one weekend in the books, we’re down to just 16 teams still alive in the men’s NCAA Tournament.

It’s a who’s-who of college basketball heavyweights. After an uneventful start to tournament play in terms of upsets, higher seeds dominate the Sweet 16 and create the possibility for a star-studded Final Four next month in San Antonio.

All four No. 1 seeds are among this group. So are three of the four No. 2 seeds. There’s just one double-digit seed in the Sweet 16. Favorites have prevailed, by and large, leaving no real Cinderella story among the teams still competing for the national championship.

In terms of upsets, No. 12 McNeese State topped No. 5 Clemson for the first tournament win in program history and No. 10 Arkansas pulled off a stunner by beating No. 2 St. John’s to reach the Sweet 16 in coach John Calipari’s first season.

Here are the biggest winners and losers from the tournament’s first two rounds:

WINNERS

No. 1 seeds

Auburn overcame a rocky start against No. 16 Alabama State and then advanced against No. 9 Creighton. Houston dominated SIU-Edwardsville before needing nearly every second to survive against No. 8 Gonzaga. Florida breezed past Norfolk State before winning 77-75 against No. 8 Connecticut, the two-time defending national champions. But the most impressive of this bunch has definitely been Duke, which faced no pressure against Mount St. Mary’s and No. 9 Baylor, winning by a combined 67 points.

Duke

Let’s single out the Blue Devils further, and not just for being the most impressive team on the No. 1 line through the opening weekend. Another big asset in their favor has been the play of freshman forward Cooper Flagg, who injured his ankle in the ACC semifinals and missed the championship game against Louisville. But Flagg looked healthy against Mount St. Mary’s, scoring 14 points with seven rebounds in 22 minutes, and then made an even bigger impact against the Bears with 18 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists in 29 minutes.

John Calipari

Getting to the Sweet 16 in his first season at Arkansas after winning just one tournament game in his five years at Kentucky is sweet validation for Calipari, made even sweeter by the fact the Razorbacks defeated Rick Pitino and the Red Storm to get there. This year has to rank among the best coaching jobs of his career when you think about how the roster was completely remade in the offseason, how young and reliant on freshmen this team really is and the number of injuries they suffered along the way. Not to mention: Arkansas was once 0-5 and then 1-6 in the SEC before beginning to put together a tournament case heading into Selection Sunday.

The SEC

After a historic regular season that resulted in a record 14 teams making this year’s field, the SEC will set another record by sending seven teams into the Sweet 16, breaking the previous mark of six teams from one league set by the ACC in 2016. It’ll be Auburn and No. 6 Mississippi in the South, Florida and Arkansas in the West, No. 2 Alabama in the East and No. 2 Tennessee and No. 3 Kentucky in the Midwest. In the one SEC-only matchup, the Volunteers and Wildcats will face off on Thursday in Indianapolis. On one hand, that half of the SEC lineup failed to advance could be seen as a letdown, especially when you consider opening-round upsets such as No. 6 Missouri falling to No. 11 Drake and No. 8 Mississippi State coming up a point short against No. 9 Baylor. On the other, though, putting half of these 14 teams into the Sweet 16 puts the SEC alone in NCAA tournament history – making the league a clear winner from the first two rounds.

Maryland

The most dramatic moment of the second round came via Maryland freshman Derik Queen, who caught an inbound pass near the top of the key with 3.6 seconds left, drove toward the left baseline, rose above a pair of Colorado State defenders and banked in a fadeaway jumper as time expired to give the No. 4 Terrapins a 72-71 win against the No. 12 Rams. Queen had a team-high 17 points while all five of the Terrapins’ starters scored in double figures. Incredibly, this is Maryland’s first Sweet 16 appearance since 2016 and just the second since 2003.

LOSERS

Connecticut

After a difficult regular season, the Huskies rebounded to defeat No. 9 Oklahoma, 67-59, thanks to a strong second half from junior forward Alex Karaban, who finished with 13 points and seven rebounds. That extended the program’s tournament winning streak to 13 games, tied for the second-longest in NCAA history behind UCLA’s 38-game streak from 1964-74. The Gators snapped that run, but not without being pushed nearly to the brink: Florida overcame 12 turnovers and held UConn to 8 of 29 shooting from deep to win 77-75. The Huskies and coach Dan Hurley are heading into a crucial offseason and will need to go back to the drawing board to return to the top of college basketball.

Big East

The Huskies’ early exit is part of a broader tournament disappearing act from the Big East, which will have no team in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2019. A year ago, all three Big East teams in the bracket — UConn, Marquette and Creighton — advanced out of the opening weekend, and the conference went 22-6 overall in tournament play across the past two seasons. But all five teams in this year’s field are already heading home. In addition to the Huskies, Red Storm and Creighton, No. 7 Marquette was upset by No. 10 New Mexico and No. 11 Xavier lost to No. 6 Illinois after beating Texas in the First Four.

Cinderellas, underdogs, tournament darlings, etc.

That Arkansas is the Cinderella story of the Sweet 16 tells you all you need to know about the big-name, major-brand teams still alive in the race for the national championship. This is the first tournament without a Sweet 16 featuring at least one team higher than a No. 10 seed since 2007. This is also the first tournament since 2017 without at least one non-power conference team in the Sweet 16 other than Gonzaga, which saw its nine-year run of Sweet 16 appearances snapped by the Cougars. While the lack of a clear underdog takes some juice out of the remaining bracket, that there are so many elite teams and programs still standing should yield a very strong Final Four field.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Three Dallas Stars employees used their positions with the National Hockey League team and atop prominent youth hockey nonprofit organizations to profit at thousands of families’ expense, a USA TODAY investigation found.

The employees – Damon Boettcher, Lucas Reid and Brad Buckland – organized dozens of Stars-run youth hockey tournaments that required out-of-town participants to book rooms for a minimum number of nights at select hotels. At the same time, the employees separately ran a company, Stay2Play LLC, that acted as a middleman between the Stars and the hotels, taking a cut of the revenue. 

The arrangement went on for 4 ½ years. Nearly half the participants at 48 Stars-run tournaments from mid-2020 to December 2024 hailed from outside the host city and its surrounding region, the investigation found. Each of those more than 20,000 participants’ hotel payments may have unknowingly padded the bank accounts of the three Stars employees.

Parents couldn’t find a cheaper hotel or split an Airbnb. Those who tried to skirt the requirement risked their children being kicked out of the tournament and the forfeiture of all their team’s games – without a refund of entry fees, usually between $1,000 and $2,000 per team. Instead, they were forced to pay hundreds of dollars for hotel rooms they did not always want or need. 

USA TODAY reviewed more than 40 official tournament rulebooks detailing the requirements, state business filings, travel agency registries, website archives and invoices from two tournament hotels that charged $162 to $175 per night after taxes. Most tournaments required a minimum three-night stay; some required four. 

Stay-to-play requirements are somewhat common across youth sports and maddening to many parents. The organization hosting the tournament usually receives a kickback from the hotel booking revenue, and sometimes a third-party company that coordinates with the hotels also takes a cut. The difference in this case is that the kickbacks went to the same people tasked with organizing, overseeing and shaping the rules for the tournaments, as opposed to an independent entity. And those people had multiple conflicts of interest.

Boettcher, Reid and Buckland carried out the operation not only while they were Stars employees, but while Reid served as president of the nonprofit Texas Amateur Hockey Association – the USA Hockey affiliate that acts as the governing body overseeing youth and adult hockey in Texas and Oklahoma – and Buckland served as secretary.

One of the association’s primary responsibilities is facilitating tournaments for its members – the same tournaments from which Reid and Buckland personally profited – by validating that they comply with USA Hockey rules. Although the president and secretary don’t personally vote on which tournaments to approve, they set the agenda for the association and vote on changes to policies and procedures. A proposal for a new rule barring stay-to-play requirements, for instance, would have to go through them.

Parents whose membership fees support the nonprofit expect its board members to act in their interests. Yet two of those board members had a financial incentive to ensure families kept paying for unwanted hotel stays.

As of January, the three employees appear to no longer work for the Stars. Reid and Buckland remain on the Texas Amateur Hockey Association’s board.

Reid and Buckland did not respond to phone or email messages seeking comment. In an emailed statement, Boettcher denied any wrongdoing. He declined to be interviewed and did not answer specific questions about the arrangement from USA TODAY.

“Our goal, as an independent company, when the lessening threat of Covid finally allowed restoration of more normal activity was to facilitate families participating in tournaments in North Texas venues,” Boettcher’s statement said. “We have always attempted to have all parents and families be satisfied with the choices provided.”

The Stars also declined to answer specific questions about the arrangement from USA TODAY.

“The Dallas Stars are no longer affiliated with Stay2Play LLC and plan to reinstate a new stay-to-play provider for our tournaments this fall,” Stars director of communications Joe Calvillo said in an emailed statement. “The Dallas Stars are committed to providing the best possible experience for all players, teams and families who participate in our leagues and tournaments.”

USA Hockey officials did not respond to requests for comment. Attorneys representing the Texas Amateur Hockey Association said in an email that they do not consider the arrangement a conflict of interest under USA Hockey rules.

The conflicts of interest raise concerns about potential self-dealing, which is when a person with a fiduciary duty to an organization takes an action for personal gain, legal experts who spoke to USA TODAY said. For some parents, it was just the latest example of the Stars capitalizing on their children’s hockey aspirations.

“It’s a horrible mandate,” said Shanna Stout, whose son’s team in Oklahoma played in several Stars tournaments in Dallas. “Hockey is an incredibly expensive sport, and when they see an opportunity to make money off of parents that are stuck in the South, there’s no other rink.”

Because the $2 billion NHL team controls many facets of youth hockey in Texas and Oklahoma, including much of the ice, Stout said families have little choice but to play by its rules.

“You kind of feel like you’re stuck in a monopoly,” she said. “And they take advantage of it.”

Youth tournaments drive big money, frustration

Unlike most parts of the country, amateur hockey in Texas runs through the state’s NHL team.

The Dallas Stars and the team’s executives own or operate eight of the 11 ice rinks in the Dallas-Ft. Worth region, city contracts and county property records show.

The Stars run the house and high school leagues and have their hands in the travel league. Although the Texas Amateur Hockey Association and Dallas Stars Travel Hockey League are ostensibly independent nonprofit entities, their boards have often been filled with Stars bigwigs.

Tournaments are a major cash cow for the Stars’ rinks, called StarCenters. Every year, they host around a dozen tournaments for youth and adult teams across America and other countries. The largest ones bring 160 or more teams to Dallas.

For families, the biggest expense, by far, is lodging.

Stars tournaments have had stay-to-play mandates since at least 2019, website archives and official tournament rulebooks show. They require families to check in the day before the tournament begins and check out the day it ends. If they don’t, they risk disqualification.

Stay-to-play requirements have long frustrated hockey families, said Sten Carlson, a coach in Austin whose daughter has played in several Stars tournaments. The hotel rates offered to tournament attendees often seem higher than those for the general public, he said – a sentiment expressed by multiple parents who spoke to USA TODAY.

It would be cheaper and more practical for Carlson’s family to commute from Austin, he said, particularly on days when their team isn’t scheduled for an early game. For a tournament in 2023, Carlson’s daughter’s team was forced to book three nights, checking in on a Thursday, even though the team didn’t play until 12:30 p.m. on Friday.

“We could easily wake up at five and jump in the car, be up there by eight o’clock,” he said.

Carlson said he did not know that the same people who organized the tournaments for the Stars were personally profiting from them – but he was not surprised.

“I think we all sort of suspected something like that, to be honest,” he said. “Any time you have got a large amount of money moving through places, somebody always seems to want to get their hands on it.”

A new company – and subtle change

The Stars and Hilton used to have a partnership that required tournament participants to book their stays at Hilton-branded properties. Hilton spokeswoman Mina Radman said those properties, many of which are independently owned and operated, provided room blocks for Dallas Stars tournaments from 2017 to 2020.

That changed in July 2020 when the three Stars employees, whose job responsibilities included putting on the tournaments, filed paperwork to do business in Texas as Stay2Play LLC.

Boettcher listed himself as the president, business records show. Reid, Buckland and Boettcher’s wife, Cassandra Boettcher, were vice presidents. Another for-profit company run by the Boettchers claimed a 50% ownership stake in Stay2Play. Cassandra Boettcher also did not respond to phone or email messages from USA TODAY.

Damon Boettcher, at the time, served as the Stars’ vice president of StarCenter facilities. Reid was the Stars’ vice president of amateur sports and partnership development, as well as Texas Amateur Hockey Association’s president.

Buckland served as the Stars’ tournament director and as secretary of both the association and the travel league, which required member teams to play in at least one Stars tournament a year.

From July 2020 forward, Stay2Play replaced Hilton in the official Stars tournament rulebooks as the “exclusive provider” of hotel accommodations.

Before the change, the Stars’ tournament website directed participants to book rooms through stay2play.online, a website adorned with Stars and Hilton branding. After, it instead directed them to stay2playonline.com, which uses a similar logo but lacks the Stars or Hilton branding.

The new site was registered to Stay2Play LLC.

‘They’ll hold you over a barrel’

Stay2Play remained the “exclusive provider” of hotel accommodations for Stars tournaments until January 2025, tournament rulebooks show.

Two significant developments took place around that month. The Stars deleted the minimum-stay requirements and all references to Stay2Play from the rulebook for its upcoming MLK Invitational tournament. And Boettcher, Reid and Buckland were removed from the Stars’ online front office directory.

None of the three still work for the Stars, according to their LinkedIn profiles. Calvillo, the Stars spokesperson, said the organization does not comment on “personnel matters.”

Reid and Buckland are still listed on the Texas Amateur Hockey Association and Dallas Stars Travel Hockey League websites as members of the nonprofits’ executive boards.

None of the 11 members of the association’s board of directors or the travel league’s president, Paul Freudigman, responded to requests for comment.

Reid and Buckland “have dedicated countless hours to building one of the most cohesive districts in the nation,” Steven Stapleton, a Michigan-based attorney who represents the Texas Amateur Hockey Association, said in an email.

“Many TAHA members are engaged in other professional endeavors,” the email said. “This does not preclude any of them from running for and serving the TAHA community.”

During the 4 ½ years in which Stay2Play was the exclusive hotel provider, 48 Stars tournaments attracted more than 12,000 different players, coaches and team members from out-of-town teams, a USA TODAY analysis of online team rosters found. Many participated in more than one tournament.

Among them was Stout, who lives in Oklahoma City about a three-hour drive from Dallas. She paid $512 for a three-night stay at the Embassy Suites for the Stars’ Labor Day Kickoff tournament – a mandatory tournament for all of the more than 100 teams in the Dallas Stars Travel Hockey League, including her son’s.

Hilton, the parent company for Embassy Suites, declined to answer specific questions about the arrangement from USA TODAY. Radman, its spokesperson, said in an emailed statement that Hilton “has never had a relationship with Stay2Play.”

Stout’s son’s team played its first game of the tournament at 3:45 p.m. on Saturday, but tournament rules required them to check into the hotel on Friday night. They stayed for three nights, even though the team played games on only two of the days.

“It’s hockey in the South,” she said. “They’ll hold you over a barrel, that’s for sure.”

Conflicts of interest raise concern

The Stay2Play arrangement was rife with potential conflicts of interest, said Todd Haugh, director of the Institute for Corporate Governance and Ethics at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, who researches corporate compliance, organizational wrongdoing and white-collar crime.

Employees have a duty of loyalty to their organization, he said, meaning they cannot engage in self-dealing, take opportunities away from the organization, or set up a company to overcharge or otherwise take advantage of it.

Reid and Buckland, he said, legally owed the same fiduciary duty to the Stars. And they owed an ethical duty to the membership of the nonprofits they helped run: the Texas Amateur Hockey Association and Dallas Stars Travel Hockey League. Families who collectively pay those organizations hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual membership fees, Haugh said, “have an expectation that the board members are being good stewards of their funds.”

Not all conflicts of interest are inherently illegal or unethical, Haugh said. But to be above board, he said, several criteria must be met.

The deal must be disclosed to the highest officers of the organization, who must openly discuss it and independently decide whether to approve it, he said. Such discussions should be documented in meeting minutes, and any parties with a personal stake in the outcome cannot vote on it.

The deal must be as “arms-length” as possible, Haugh said – both sides must act in their own interest, without influencing or pressuring each other. 

Additionally, the organization must not only get real value from the deal but also fair-market value. The deal must be in the financial interest of the organization, which can’t pay more for it than a competitor would charge.

For all those criteria to be met, Haugh said, “It would have to be a heck of a deal.”

“If they just set up a company so they could get fees,” he said, “that obviously would not be on the up-and-up.” 

Asked whether those criteria were met in this case, the Stars and the Texas Amateur Hockey Association attorneys declined to answer. USA Hockey spokespeople and Dallas Stars Travel Hockey League board members did not respond to questions.

Stapleton, the attorney representing the association, said in an email that “there is no conflict of interest implicated by any TAHA Board Member with respect to TAHA operated and administered tournaments, as that term is defined by USA Hockey’s Conflict of Interest policy.’ He added that the association itself did not contract with Stay2Play LLC.

USA Hockey policy states that conflicts of interest “exist when an individual’s activities or relationships present the potential for improper personal gain or advantage, or an adverse effect on the interests of USA Hockey.”

One example it lists is when individuals have a financial interest in a decision they make in their capacity acting on behalf of USA Hockey.

Another is when such a person has a client that owns or operates a facility being considered as the host of a USA Hockey event. 

Kenny Jacoby is an investigative reporter for USA TODAY who covers issues in sports, higher education and law enforcement. Contact him by email at kjacoby@usatoday.com. Follow him on X @kennyjacoby or Bluesky @kennyjacoby.bsky.social.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NFL mock drafts are, at their core, an exercise in hypotheticals and guesswork. But with the first round now just a month away, some of the latest projections can be a little bit more rooted in reality than editions from a few weeks ago.

With the overwhelming bulk of free agency money already allotted, teams have had to show their hands on at least part of their offseason plans. And while there are still several key figures who could shape the class’ outlook – namely Aaron Rodgers, who visited the Pittsburgh Steelers on Friday and also appears to have the New York Giants on hold – some elements for the early order are falling into place.

Here’s USA TODAY Sports’ latest mock draft projection for the full first round:

1. Tennessee Titans – Cam Ward, QB, Miami (Fla.)

With two weeks having passed since the first free agent deals were reached, Will Levis has only been joined by Brandon Allen on Tennessee’s roster, and the team doesn’t appear to be in the mix for any other quarterbacks who would be seen as a potential bridge starter. That’s left many to conclude that the Titans already have their eyes trained on Ward. While it might be early to declare that outcome a lock, the odds for other possibilities are certainly dwindling. It remains to be seen whether Ward clears the ‘generational talent’ bar that the team has thrown around in reference to the first pick, but the scintillating 6-2, 219-pound passer would certainly give the franchise a distinct sense of direction after Brian Callahan’s first year was a wash.

2. Cleveland Browns – Abdul Carter, DE, Penn State

Myles Garrett stirred some intrigue when he said he had an ‘idea’ of what the team was planning to do at quarterback, leading many to speculate that Shedeur Sanders would be the target. And while establishing some kind of spark behind center might be necessary to ignite this group, bypassing one of the class’ two apparent elite talents would constitute a significant gamble. Pairing Garrett with Carter, the draft’s pre-eminent disruptive force, would be a sensible way to optimize assets early, with a quarterback still potentially in play later on.

3. New York Giants – Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado

Adding Jameis Winston only highlighted the extent of the Giants’ desperation at quarterback, with at least one other move almost sure to come. If Rodgers decides to sign with New York, using this pick on either Carter or Travis Hunter would be a reasonable move for a regime already put on notice. But if Big Blue has to move even further down its list of desired veteran signal-callers in the coming weeks, taking on Sanders as well might be the only way out of quarterback purgatory.

4. New England Patriots – Travis Hunter, CB/WR, Colorado

With the Giants’ pick shaping up to be the inflection point of the first round, the Patriots are left to ponder whether one of this year’s premier talents will fall into their lap or if they’ll need to pivot to focusing on sizable voids at left tackle and wide receiver. In this case, the former scenario materializes, and New England can prioritize value while sorting out positional matters later – though Hunter surely qualifies as the game-breaking receiver the team has been missing, so long as the team is willing to give him extensive reps there.

5. Jacksonville Jaguars – Mason Graham, DT, Michigan

After making a handful of mid-tier moves in early free agency, first-year general manager James Gladstone is preparing for a youth movement, saying, ‘We’re going to allow these rookies to get a chance to get out on the field and help us this coming fall.’ One area that looks ripe for help through the draft is the defensive line, where Graham could help establish a new tone with his hyperactive pursuit.

6. Las Vegas Raiders – Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona

This might be early for McMillan, who could have a fairly wide range of outcomes in the first round given questions about his long speed. But if the Raiders don’t feel comfortable leaving Geno Smith to throw to Brock Bowers and a ragtag receiving corps, McMillan might not have to wait as long on draft day as some envision.

7. New York Jets – Armand Membou, OT, Missouri

Both Aaron Glenn and Darren Mougey know the transformative value offered by a top-notch offensive line after their respective runs with the Detroit Lions and Denver Broncos. Whether running roughshod over defenders or keeping them at bay in the passing game, Membou can step in at right tackle and be a standard-bearer for the new regime.

8. Carolina Panthers – Jalon Walker, LB, Georgia

At 6-1 and 243 pounds, Walker isn’t the prototype for a potential cornerstone of a team’s pass rush. But the Panthers shouldn’t be dissuaded by the Butkus Award winner’s size, as he could represent their best chance at awakening a unit that ranked 31st in ESPN’s pass-rush win rate metric.

9. New Orleans Saints – Will Johnson, CB, Michigan

Trading away Marshon Lattimore and losing Paulson Adebo in free agency has left New Orleans wobbly at cornerback. While a team in significant transition shouldn’t force picks on need alone, Johnson is well worth consideration in this spot as a player who, prior to an injury-marred 2024 campaign, fully looked the part of a longtime No. 1 corner.

10. Chicago Bears – Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State

Is taking a running back this high a luxury for a team that went 5-12 last season? Maybe. But after transforming the team’s offensive line and bolstering its defensive front, general manager Ryan Poles said the Bears’ spring spending spree ‘really opens the whole board for us.’ Rather than merely be an additive presence, Jeanty could be the kind of figure who helps recalibrate the attack, creating big gains by slipping past would-be tacklers or bouncing off them.

11. San Francisco 49ers – Will Campbell, OT, LSU

A shift away from a roster replete with highly paid veterans creates an onus on general manager John Lynch to bring aboard some new low-cost building blocks. If San Francisco is intent on finding steady ground after a rocky offseason, a natural first step would be turning to Campbell. Savvy and smooth as a blocker, the consensus All-American might end up moving inside due to concerns about his arm length, though he has the tools to hang at tackle – perhaps even as an eventual successor to Trent Williams.

12. Dallas Cowboys – Matthew Golden, WR, Texas

After again treating free agency like a yard sale while other teams operated as though they were at the auction house, Dallas is due for a spark. Golden certainly provides that, with his knack for creating separation making him an enticing asset for Dak Prescott and a Cowboys offense searching for some semblance of a threat beyond CeeDee Lamb.

13. Miami Dolphins – Kelvin Banks Jr., OT, Texas

Miami has already experienced many of the limitations left by its underperforming lines, so allotting early picks up front is imperative for general manager Chris Grier. A natural scheme fit for the Dolphins, Banks could slot in at guard while still providing flexibility if Patrick Paul has trouble taking over at left tackle.

14. Indianapolis Colts – Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State

If Warren makes it out of the top 10, this should be his floor. The Colts could surely use a pass catcher who can not only be a safety valve for either Daniel Jones or Anthony Richardson but also bail out his quarterback by snagging contested catches or picking up huge chunks of yards after the catch.

15. Atlanta Falcons – Mike Green, DE, Marshall

Perhaps it seems simplistic to address a long dormant pass rush by plugging in the Football Bowl Subdivision leader in sacks. But Green gives something Atlanta has long lacked: a jolt off the edge who can truly create chaos rather than merely clean plays up.

16. Arizona Cardinals – Jihaad Campbell, LB, Alabama

Elevating the talent level of the front seven no longer seems to be such a pressing concern after an offseason highlighted by the signing of Super Bowl 59 standout Josh Sweat. But Monti Ossenfort and Jonathan Gannon still have plenty of reason to be drawn to Campbell, an ascendant talent who would electrify the pass rush early while honing his instincts as an off-ball linebacker.

17. Cincinnati Bengals – Shemar Stewart, DE, Texas A&M

Ponying up to keep Trey Hendrickson is the sensible move for a team that appears to be all in on its current vision following the massive extensions handed out to receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins. No matter how the organization chooses to proceed with its remaining disgruntled star, Stewart offers the immense upside that Cincinnati will be eager to capitalize on after a spotty run of early round defensive draft picks in recent years.

18. Seattle Seahawks – Grey Zabel, G/C, North Dakota State

In swapping out Geno Smith for Sam Darnold and replacing DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett with Cooper Kupp, the Seahawks have fully embraced the vision for a Klint Kubiak offense. The next logical step: importing Zabel, who can shore up the pressing deficiency at guard and looks tailor-made for a heavy dose of outside zone runs.

19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Jahdae Barron, CB, Texas

If there’s one coach who would most appreciate the full scope of Barron’s ability, it’s Todd Bowles. The Buccaneers coach and former NFL defensive back would surely relish the versatility and savvy of the Thorpe Award winner, and Tampa Bay could deploy him in a wide array of different looks and assignments.

20. Denver Broncos – Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina

Utilizing an early draft pick on a running back is essentially a necessity for the Broncos, who have yet to fulfill Sean Payton’s offseason commitment to ‘stack that position group.’ The biggest question for Denver is whether it sees sufficient value in taking Hampton in the first round or would prefer to pursue a Day 2 alternative. But given how easily the powerful 6-0, 221-pound ball carrier could slide into this ascending attack, it’s easy to see why this will remain a popular projection throughout the pre-draft process.

21. Pittsburgh Steelers – Jaxson Dart, QB, Mississippi

Though Pittsburgh has managed not to let its shortcomings behind center submarine the team, it still has paid a heavy price for its inability to forge a path forward at quarterback. Dart might be hard-pressed to step in as a Day 1 starter, especially for a playoff-caliber outfit, but he could be an efficient facilitator in Arthur Smith’s scheme if he develops his anticipation and footwork – perhaps behind someone like Aaron Rodgers.

22. Los Angeles Chargers – Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan

With Najee Harris and Mekhi Becton joining Jim Harbaugh’s crew, the Bolts appear to be only leaning further into the established identity of the Greg Roman offense. But reuniting with another former Wolverine in Loveland would open things a bit more for Justin Herbert, who surely would stand to benefit from having a much more dynamic downfield threat at tight end than checkdown option Tyler Conklin.

23. Green Bay Packers – Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon

With seemingly no true No. 1 receiver available, the easy call for Green Bay is to focus on creating more disruption on defense. That could point the Packers to Harmon, a versatile force who would allow Brian Gutekunst to comfortably move on from Kenny Clark or Devonte Wyatt if the GM doesn’t want to pay a hefty bill for either defensive tackle in 2026.

24. Minnesota Vikings – Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina

After an active and aggressive run in free agency to resolve uncertainties along both lines and in the secondary, Minnesota has enviable flexibility here. Trading back remains a strong option for a team with just four picks, but standing pat could land them Emmanwori, a phenomenal athlete and versatile coverage piece who no doubt would stand to benefit from apprenticing under Harrison Smith.

25. Houston Texans – Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State

Yes, the Texans added both Cam Robinson and Trent Brown to provide some relief at offensive tackle after trading Laremy Tansil. But with both veterans on one-year prove-it deals, there’s still no long-term protection plan in place for C.J. Stroud. As Simmons continues to work his way back from a torn patellar tendon suffered in October, he could take a backseat to the more established presences before eventually taking over and becoming the fixture required to settle this front.

26. Los Angeles Rams – Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky

After reconfiguring their pass rush last year by drafting NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Jared Verse and finalist Braden Fiske, the Rams should be seeking out a similar revitalization of their secondary. Comfortable in both man and zone coverage, the feisty Hairston would accelerate the youth movement on defense.

27. Baltimore Ravens – Donovan Ezeiruaku, OLB, Boston College

Though he’s never one to force a selection based on short-term considerations, Ravens GM Eric DeCosta acknowledged at the combine that ‘having a continuous influx of young pass-rush talent … that’s a priority for us, sure.’ As perhaps the draft class’ most refined edge rusher after notching 16 ½ sacks last season, Ezeiruaku has the requisite tools to enjoy an expedited transition to the NFL if the 6-3, 248-pounder can hold up against bigger and more powerful blockers.

28. Detroit Lions – Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan

Re-signing Levi Onwuzurike to a one-year deal provides a little more clarity for the Lions’ interior, which had a murky outlook as Alim McNeill continues to recover from a torn ACL suffered in December. But Detroit could solidify the spot much more by adding Grant, a 6-4, 331-pound magnet for double teams.

29. Washington Commanders – Mykel Williams, DE, Georgia

Barring a trade for Trey Hendrickson, Washington looks bound to head into the draft in search of a difference-maker on the edge. The 6-5, 265-pound Williams could easily go much higher thanks to his nearly ideal set of physical traits at a position where they’re prized. In this scenario, however, he lands at what should be considered his floor.

30. Buffalo Bills – Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State

While the Bills boast two staples in the secondary thanks to Christian Benford and Taron Johnson, the AFC title game – in which Benford was knocked out with a concussion and since-traded cornerback Kaiir Elam was repeatedly picked on – reinforced the importance of eliminating any weak links. Thomas’ size and physicality in coverage would give Buffalo some peace of mind about matching up in man coverage against the likes of the Chiefs and other AFC powers.

31. Kansas City Chiefs – Walter Nolen, DT, Mississippi

Further investment in the offensive line can’t be entirely ruled out here, but trading Joe Thuney to the Bears and ponying up big for Jaylon Moore might wrap up the team’s offseason plan of drastic action for its biggest vulnerability. Dropping Nolen in next to Chris Jones would ensure opponents will have their hands full with the Chiefs’ interior line for some time.

32. Philadelphia Eagles – Malaki Starks, S, Georgia

Another highly regarded Georgia defender? Why not? If Howie Roseman doesn’t utilize his top draft pick to indulge his obsession with building along the lines, maybe he can make another signature move by upping his defense’s Dawg quotient, which has already been boosted with the signing of Azeez Ojulari.

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When Dodgers All-Star Mookie Betts missed the team’s season-opening series in Japan with what was thought to be a stomach bug, it didn’t seem to be a big deal.

He flew home ahead of the team so that he could regain his strength and be ready for the Dodgers’ stateside opener on Thursday. But Betts’ status for the upcoming three-game series against the Detroit Tigers is still in question.

Betts says he is still throwing up whenever he tries to eat solid food, and he’s down to 157 pounds from the 175 he weighed at the start of spring training.

Doctors have yet to determine exactly what is wrong with the six-time Gold Glove outfielder, who is set to take over as the team’s starting shortstop this season. Betts says all blood work and tests have come back clean.

‘My body feels great. I’ve been able to work out. I’ve been able to do pretty much everything but eat, which is strange,’ he told MLB.com. ‘So the symptoms have kind of gone away, I just have to figure out how to get my stomach to kind of calm down.”

Betts was scheduled to start Sunday’s exhibition game against the Los Angeles Angels, but was scratched from the lineup about 90 minutes before first pitch.

Miguel Rojas stepped in at shortstop for the two games in Japan and continues to fill that spot in the lineup while Betts is out.

Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman, who also missed the Japan Series with rib soreness, was in the lineup for Sunday’s game and is expected to be good to go for Thursday.

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The recent arrest of Istanbul’s Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu and main rival of President Erdoğan has sparked the largest protests in Turkey in a decade, with over 1,100 people detained in demonstrations across the country.

The Istanbul mayor and 106 other municipal officials and politicians were detained on March 19 for what Human Rights Watch called a politically motivated move to stifle lawful political activities.

‘By forcing Imamoglu out of politics, the government has crossed the line that separates Turkey’s competitive authoritarian regime from a full, Russian-style autocracy in which the president handpicks his opponents and elections are purely for show,’ Gonul Tol, Director of Turkish Program at the Middle East Institute, told Fox News Digital.

A spokesperson from Turkey’s embassy in Washington, D.C., told Fox News Digital that Turkey’s Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said 1,133 people have been detained since the arrest of the mayor, and around 123 police officers have been injured since the start of protests. Yerlikaya also alleged that weapons were seized during the protests and the individuals detained were found to have ties to different terrorist organizations and prior criminal records.

Some experts believe the move was orchestrated by Erdoğan to sideline the opposition, silence political dissent and increase his own power.

‘This is a dark time for democracy in Turkey, with such a blatantly lawless move to weaponize the justice system to cancel the democratic process,’ Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia Director at Human Rights Watch, told Fox News Digital in a statement.

In an address to celebrate the festival of Nowruz on Friday, Erdoğan said Turkey was not a country that was found on the street and will not submit to street terrorism.

‘We will not allow public order to be damaged. We will not give in to vandalism or street terrorism,’ Erdoğan said, according to Reuters.

The opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) held a symbolic primary vote over the weekend and nominated İmamoğlu to be the party’s candidate for president to face Erdoğan in the 2028 elections.

Despite the increased repression and threats to their own safety and security, the Turkish opposition does not yet seem to be backing down.

‘We, as the main opposition party that emerged as the first party in the last local elections in March 2024, will stand firm and resist any kind of oppression by the government,’ İlhan Uzgel, CHP Deputy Chairman for Foreign Policy, told Fox News Digital.

Uzgel said Erdoğan seems frightened of losing power, and is urging opposition supporters to take to the streets to defend democracy, challenge lawlessness, and challenge the Erdoğan government’s abuse of power.  

‘We are happy to see that our people take to the streets despite the occasional use of force by the riot police, and demonstrate peacefully, which is a constitutional right,’ he added.

Imamoglu, who is presently jailed and is awaiting trial on corruption charges, was viewed as the most serious challenger to the decades-long rule of Erdoğan. His detention will likely keep him out of the political opposition for the foreseeable future, dealing a huge blow to Turkey’s pro-democracy movement. 

Tol of the Middle East Institute said Erdoğan is banking on people’s anger dissipating over time and that the mass protests will eventually die down. The election is not scheduled until 2028, and people, Erdoğan hopes, will most likely forget and move on.

The danger, according to Tol, is that street protests in the Middle East and elsewhere tend to go in many different directions, and there is no telling how long the public anger over the arrests will last and how much more popular support the movement will gain.

İmamoğlu, member of the secular Republican People’s Party (CHP), was elected mayor of Istanbul in 2019 and re-elected in 2023. In both elections, he defeated Erdoğan-backed opponents. 

Turkey’s problems come at a time when President Trump is reportedly considering lifting sanctions on the NATO member and resuming the sale of F-35 fighter jets following a recent phone call with Erdoğan.

Reuters contributed to this article.

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President Donald Trump’s Cabinet outlined billions of dollars in contracts it says it has canceled since he took office, including a ‘$300,000 contract educating on food justice for queer and transgender farmers in San Francisco’ and $830 million on surveys described as looking like ‘anyone’s child in junior high could have put together.’ 

The contracts, which Trump said represented ‘fraud,’ are being canceled as Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are trying to eliminate wasteful spending by the federal government. 

‘Even at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, we canceled a $300,000 contract educating on food justice for queer and transgender farmers in San Francisco. A similar contract we canceled in New York, again educating transgender and queer farmers on food justice and food equality. I’m not even sure what that means, but apparently the last administration wanted to put out taxpayer dollars towards that,’ Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told Trump. 

‘We canceled a $600,000 contract out of Louisiana that was studying the menstrual cycles of transgender men. We canceled another contract out of a university in the middle of the country that focused on getting more diversity, equity and inclusion into our pest management industry,’ she continued. ‘Again, these are nonsensical, it makes zero sense to use taxpayer dollars to fund these. I know these are just a few examples of the hundreds and hundreds we have found.’ 

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum told Trump that ‘There is a federal consulting group which was a group inside of Interior, but it was managing contracts for many different agencies that flowed through here’ and ‘one of those contracts was to do surveys of individuals, $830 million for surveys.’ 

‘And so part of the question was ‘hey could we actually see the surveys?’ and then the surveys came back and it was, the survey was like 8.5 by 11 sheet of paper with ten questions that anyone’s child in junior high could have put together, or AI could have done for free,’ Burgum said during the Cabinet meeting. ‘$830 million, so that is one that we stopped and that contract was going out after you were inaugurated, sir.’ 

‘It’s fraud,’ Trump responded. ‘But we’ve had many fraudulent contracts that were caught by the work that Elon and his people are doing and working with our people. It’s been brought to light. The fraud, not just waste and abuse. The fraud has been incredible.’ 

An X account linked to the White House said Burgum announced $830 million in savings by ‘cutting contracts for useless surveys.’ 

‘The EPA has now canceled over $22 billion worth of contracts – $2 billion going to this NGO that Stacey Abrams was tied to. They received only $100 in 2023 and then the Biden administration gave them $2 billion,’ Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin also said. ‘The director of the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund saw his former employer get $5 billion dollars. So $20 billion went to just eight NGOs.’ 

‘The partnership with DOGE and Elon Musk has been incredible at EPA. Their team is very talented, we wouldn’t have been able to do it without them and of course this mandate from President Trump to make sure that we identify every last penny, whether we are saving $50,000, five million dollars or $22 billion dollars we will not rest until every last penny is saved. Thank you, Mr. President for the opportunity to do this for the American public,’ Zeldin added. 

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The Supreme Court heard arguments Monday on whether Louisiana lawmakers can use race as a factor when drawing congressional maps, a closely watched case that could impact voters nationwide in the 2026 midterms.

At issue is whether the state’s congressional map, updated twice since the 2020 census, is an illegal racial gerrymander. It has faced two federal court challenges – first, for diluting minority voting power under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, and most recently, for potentially violating the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment and the 15th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

The high court, which agreed to take up the case last fall, is expected to hand down its decision by late June. 

During oral arguments, the justices focused closely on whether Louisiana’s redistricting efforts were narrowly tailored enough to meet constitutional requirements and whether race was used in a way that violates the law, as plaintiffs have alleged.

Louisiana Solicitor General Benjamin Aguiñaga argued that the state’s latest map protected political stability, including preserving leadership positions like the U.S. House speaker and majority leader.

‘I want to emphasize that the larger picture here is important – because in an election year we faced the prospect of a federal court-drawn map that placed in jeopardy the speaker of the House, the House majority leader and our representative on the Appropriations Committee,’ Aguiñaga said. ‘And so in light of those facts, we made the politically rational decision: we drew our own map to protect them.’

Louisiana’s congressional map has twice been challenged in federal court since it was updated in the wake of the 2020 census, which found that the state’s Black residents now totaled one-third of Louisiana’s total population. 

The first redistricting map, which included just one district where Black voters held the majority, was invalidated by a federal court (and subsequently, by the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals) in 2022. 

Both courts sided with the Louisiana State Conference of the NAACP and other plaintiffs, who argued that the map violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by diluting the voting power of Black voters in the state. 

Lawmakers were ordered by the court to adopt by January 2024 a new state redistricting map. That map, S.B. 8, was passed and included the creation of a second majority-Black voting district in the state. 

But S.B. 8 was almost immediately challenged by a group of non-Black plaintiffs in court as well, after they claimed issue with a new district that stretched some 250 miles from Louisiana’s northwest corner of Shreveport to Baton Rouge, in the state’s southeast. 

They argued in the lawsuit that the state violated the equal protection clause by relying too heavily on race to draw the maps, and created a ‘sinuous and jagged second majority-Black district based on racial stereotypes, racially ‘Balkanizing’ a 250-mile swath of Louisiana.’

The Supreme Court agreed last November to take up the case, though it paused consideration of the arguments until after the 2024 elections.

Meanwhile, Louisiana officials argued in court filings that non-Black voters failed to show direct harm required for equal protection claims or prove race was the main factor in redrawing the map.

They also stressed that the Supreme Court should clarify how states should proceed under this ‘notoriously unclear area of the law’ that pits Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act against equal protections, describing them as two ‘competing demands.’ 

Officials have cited frustrations over repeatedly redrawing maps, and the prospect of being ordered back to the drawing board once again, and asked the court to ‘put an end to the extraordinary waste of time and resources that plagues the States after every redistricting cycle.’ 

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A House Democrat who represents a district that former Vice President Kamala Harris lost to now-President Donald Trump in 2024 is sounding the alarm about public perceptions of his party.

‘I think the Democratic brand is really in trouble, and it’s been portrayed as this crazy-left, you know, out-of-touch thing,’ Rep. Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., told Fox News Digital in an interview. ‘They couldn’t paint me with that brand because people know me.’

Suozzi is well-known in his suburban Long Island district, having been a longtime local official before first coming to Congress in 2017. He did not run for re-election in 2022 but later won a special election to replace expelled former Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., and has remained ever since.

During that time, he forged a reputation as a moderate Democrat willing to find bipartisan consensus on issues like government waste and border security – themes he wished his party would take the lead on.

 

‘When I first started talking about immigration, the need to secure the border, a lot of consultants were like, ‘Well, that’s a Republican issue. I don’t know if you should talk about that.’ But I said, ‘That’s what the people are talking about in my district,” Suozzi recalled.

‘I’m a first-generation American. My father was born in Italy, so immigration is a really important issue to me. When it became such a negative, it was actually painful for me, because I define my whole life through immigration.’

He said people in his district were also concerned about the cost of living, which he suggested was a universal concern.

‘We don’t, as Democrats, focus enough on the basics,’ Suozzi said. ‘It can’t just be choice and LGBT – important issues, but that you can’t build a party around that – so I’m trying to encourage Democrats to talk about things like, how do we rebuild the middle class?’

Additionally, like House Democratic leaders in more recent election cycles, Suozzi also denounced progressive calls to ‘defund the police’ – which he called ‘the stupidest three words ever said in the history of politics.’

He even argued Democrats were on board with cutting government waste, the stated mission of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), though Suozzi disagreed with how it was being carried out.

‘I want to set up a competition between the Democrats and the Republicans. Let’s see who can root out more waste, fraud and abuse,’ he said.

‘I don’t think anybody’s against rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse. We just don’t think that when you’re doing it through DOGE, that you should be eliminating the people that oversee the nuclear stockpile, like they did and then reversed,’ Suozzi continued.

‘We don’t think that you should be eliminating the people that are responsible for preventing the avian flu. Which they did and then tried to reverse. We don’t think you should be eliminating the people that are overseeing the outbreak of measles in Texas. That’s not a good idea. But they did. So let’s be smart about these things and let’s, you know, figure out ways that we can actually save money.’

He also called on Democrats to focus more on outreach outside ‘traditional media,’ noting Trump’s embrace of podcasts and social media to reach young male voters.

Suozzi, in particular, singled out Trump and Elon Musk’s appearances on ‘The Joe Rogan Experience,’ one of the most-listened-to podcasts in the world.

‘We have to figure out how we can get the truth out there to people. When Elon Musk or the president or somebody says something and there’s nobody to check it, and there’s no way to push back because nobody– I can’t get on Joe Rogan. I’d love to go on Joe Rogan. I can’t get on,’ he said.

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., was the only prominent Democrat to appear on Rogan’s podcast during the 2024 election cycle. Tentative plans for Harris to appear fell through, though she did appear on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast.

Overall, however, the New York Democrat signaled he was confident Democrats could take back the House of Representatives in 2026, given the historic electoral backlash to a sitting president during the midterm elections.

It is worth noting, however, that Democrats will be defending more vulnerable members in 2026 than Republicans.

‘I mean, you look at history and when a president of one party gets in power – usually that party usually loses elections the year and two years afterward. So, like, even in the local elections this year, I think you’re going to see a much higher Democratic vote because the Democrats are going to be energized, because they’re all so upset,’ Suozzi said. ‘I think that the midterms will be the same thing.’

Suozzi warned, however, that Democrats’ message ‘can’t just be about why we disagree with Trump and, you know, hair on fire and everybody freaking out.’

‘There are a lot of causes for concern,’ he conceded, but added, ‘We have to also talk about what we stand for. And I think, again, this whole idea of rebuilding the middle class and public safety and strong defense and securing the border – we have to also talk about those things as well.’

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