We are now under 20 games to go for most teams. The NL Playoff picture looks almost done- the Mets lead the Reds and Giants by 4, and the Diamondbacks and Cardinals by 4.5 games with 19 left. The real drama at this point is whether the Dodgers will hold off the Padres in the NL West race. Even the home field and bye races aren’t super closer, with Milwaukee leading Philadelphia by 5.5, and Philadelphia leading Los Angeles by 4 games. The NL Cy Young should be a wrap for Paul Scenes, while the MVP really will come down to Schwarber and Ohtani, I think. The National League intrigue is minimal.
The AL picture is a freak show, where anyone .500ish is still alive, with Seattle leading Texas by 1.5, Kansas City by 2, Cleveland by 2.5, and Tampa Bay by 4 for the last spot. New York and Boston would currently meet in the Wild Card Round, but both are in range of catching Toronto, who actually has the best record still. Seattle is clinging to life in the Wild Card race, but also is only 2.5 games back to win the AL West. Things are pretty wild in the AL at this point, with 2/3 of the league still in this thing.
With that in mind, here we go with this week’s power rankings. Teams currently in the playoffs make up 1-12. From there, I’m pretty much ranking your chances to sneak in out to about 20. From 20 to 30, I’m rating if you’re worth watching right now.
Would you rather compete in more districts or less? More states or less? The answer is obvious. Anyone in their right mind knows the answer. You would rather compete in more places because it gives you a better chance to win majorities.
Which party is doing a better job of that? The answer is emphatically not the Democratic Party. Let’s start out by stating the obvious- there are simply less blue states than red states, and less red states in which a good Democratic candidate can compete. The map for Democrats to win elections, whether it be for President or state legislators, is tighter and tighter every time. Since President Obama’s re-election ended, more and more of the nation’s land looks red. Plenty of people respond to that with “so what, land can’t vote.” Unfortunately in a federal system, geography is actually important.
Let’s start with the Presidential map. President Obama won 27 states, a district in Nebraska, and Washington, D.C., all at least once in his two runs. Hillary Clinton won 20 states and Washington in 2016. Joe Biden did a bit better, carrying 25 states, Washington, D.C., and Nebraska’s second district in 2020. Kamala Harris only won 19 states, Washington, D.C., and Nebraska’s second in 2024. The states of Iowa, Ohio, and Florida have become red bastions. The states of Indiana and Missouri have gone from super competitive in 2008 to dead red. No Democrat has been able to pull North Carolina back in since 2008. Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin all went from narrow Democrat states from 1988 to 2012, to completely swing states that Trump has won twice. Even with the positive trends in Arizona and Georgia, the map is becoming increasingly difficult for a Democratic candidate to win. States like Texas that Democrats believed would come their way because of demographics are certainly not coming to the Democratic column soon. With current trend lines, Democrats basically will have traded Iowa, Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina from lean Dem states to somewhere between swing to red, in exchange for Virginia, Colorado, and New Mexico as blue states, and Georgia, Nevada, and Arizona as swing states, and we lost all three last year.
The Senate outlook is even more bleak. Increasingly, there aren’t Democrats winning red states or Republicans winning blue states. If you told a 20 something year old that Democrats not that long ago held both Senate seats in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana, they’d think you’re on crack. If you told them that Tom Harkin used to not only win Iowa, but be well liked, they’d laugh. If you told them we recently held seats in Missouri and Indiana, they’d not believe you. Florida? Ohio? No. With maybe 19 states leaning to the Democratic side, there’s just not enough in play. There are 25 states that Trump won three times, another five he won twice, and one more he won this time, so Republicans have at least 31 states to battle in. Tack on Maine, New Hampshire, and Minnesota as states he was competitive in, and you have a GOP battle field right now of about 68 Senate seats they can realistically win. At best, the Democrats look like they could pull off 25 states, so they can maybe put 50 states on the board. If Ohio, Florida, and Iowa don’t look any better in 2026, they may literally need to run the table every election to control the Senate moving forward.
Governor races are slightly better- every once in a while you see someone win in a state they shouldn’t, from both sides. Even so, the re-districting battle that is playing out right now is probably not going to help that. In fact, with the outsized role cultural and public health fights in the states are starting to play in our politics, it could become harder and harder to get elected as a Governor in a state where the other party is the dominant political party.
And of course, this gets me to legislative races. Yes, the House of Representatives has been fairly competitive in recent years. Here’s the ugly reality though- The GOP has controlled the House for 17 of the first 25 years. Here in Pennsylvania, they controlled the Senate for all 25 years, and the House entirely for 18 of the last 25 years, and with a Republican Speaker for 20 of the last 25 years. This was during a period when the Voting Right’s Act protected minority representation more than it does now, and during a period where we held the White House for 12 of the 25 years. Uninhibited by the Voting Rights Act or an Executive Branch that will enforce it, the GOP is likely to win a race-to-the-bottom re-districting fight, nationally. Democrats have not faired all that well even under friendlier conditions.
What’s worse to consider is exactly how the Republicans have taken control. After President Obama’s victories, a lot of the “smart kids” inside the Beltway and in leadership positions within the party said “demographics are destiny,” and were going to kill the Republican Party as they lost the “emerging electorate.” They couldn’t have been more wrong. Trump ran a huge chunk of his 2024 campaign railing against transgender people. His supporters basically called Vice-President Kamala Harris a “DEI hire,” and impugned her intelligence. They at times accused her of sleeping her way to the top. Against both Hillary and Kamala, Trump backers raised doubts about women in leadership roles. Trump has spent his Presidency destroying DEI programs in the public and private sector, invading diverse cities with law enforcement and troops, and deporting anyone he can. Even with all that, he has made gains among minority voters. He has locked down anywhere rural in America. He has boxed Democrats into a smaller and smaller playing field.
I blame a ton of this all on the operative class in the Democratic Party, who used fancy algorithms to defend being uncompetitive at all with voters and places they didn’t really like. I also blame this to some extent on a donor class and activist that is way out of touch with what actual voters want the Democratic Party to do. So much of Barack Obama’s campaigns was not about his identity and ideology, and more so about saving jobs for blue collar folks in Michigan and Wisconsin, and it worked. This isn’t an either/or though. You can’t watch Roe v. Wade be overturned and say “we’ll ignore that, women won’t care.” Of course you have to respond to actual harm done in culture wars. Conceding all areas that aren’t culturally progressive though is a losing message. Taking positions that most people hate, like defending “intifada” or slamming Sydney Sweeney for saying she’s hot, just makes us look like weirdos. There’s really no constituency for it. Fighting about niche cultural issues has little appeal, even to people who voted for President Obama. What we should have learned from Hillary Clinton’s loss was that the combination of people who hate us on cultural issues and the people who just don’t give a shit about some of them, makes up a majority. We spent most of the last decade making our message “Donald Trump is unacceptably bad,” and a majority of people either disagreed or shrugged their shoulders.
We’re not going to live in the enlightened utopia that Democrats wish for. Running inauthentic “blue collar” messengers like John Fetterman isn’t going to appease anyone either. No, they don’t want the angry cultural leftist, but no, they also don’t want a bunch of Ivy League educated, trust funded socialists either. They can tell the difference between a blue collar guy and a deadbeat like Bernie Sanders too. They want a better deal from their government, and maybe none of that “globalize the intifada” garbage. Makes sense. None of that will change though until we change our “Democratic political industry” complex altogether. We’re just going to keep putting forward candidates who don’t relate at all.
I do hate picking up the phone, but every once in a while I do it, and hear some interesting rumors. The latest one has nothing to do with PA-7 (thank god), but instead has everything to do with the 18th State Senate District. The district is all of Northampton County besides the Northwest corner, and the portion of Bethlehem City in Lehigh County. Since 1998, that district has belonged to Senator Lisa Boscola, and she generally wins by a lot. For most of the last six decades (58 years), the seat has either been held by Jeanette Reibman or Boscola. It has been competitive like once in my lifetime, when Joe Uliana won the seat by like 2 votes over Bob Freeman, entirely because of the 1994 Republican wave. Otherwise it’s basically been the two Democratic women beating the bejesus out of whoever runs against them.
Senator Boscola isn’t a big favorite of progressive activists, but she has been highly effective at securing resources for the communities in her district. Her moderate tendencies make her very hard to beat in a general election that is centered in heavily moderate Northampton County. Reportedly though she has finally ruffled enough feathers to draw fire from her left. Lehigh County Commissioner at-large Jon Irons is reportedly considering primarying Boscola in 2026. Irons has been a favorite of the progressive community, and reportedly there are people encouraging him. Irons was born in Ecuador, raised in suburban Chicago, and moved here when his wife took a job at Lehigh, about a decade ago. From his website, he tells us “what he cares about and loves:”
Outside of work, I have been a committed volunteer with a number of social justice organizations. I have collected signatures in support of inclusionary zoning in Allentown, hosted city council debates, and volunteered for a number of political campaigns including Greg Edwards for Congress in 2018. Most recently, I have served as a member-leader with Lehigh Valley Stands Up where we have supported candidates for local office, organized ballot initiatives in Lehigh County and Allentown, and built a restorative, relational organizing community of working class resident’s committed to change through building political power.
I am also an avid photographer, bird watcher, and musician. I enjoy hiking in the many parks and trails throughout the county. I bike the D&L trail north and south, and I walk my dog, Dingo, every day in our West Bethlehem neighborhood. The Lehigh Valley has so much to offer, and I’ve enjoyed building and working for my community in every way I can to make a caring, empathetic, connected, and sustainable world.
Anyone is welcome to run for any office they want. From my vantage point though, the map is not in his favor here. For one, he is way, way behind in name recognition in this district, because he has only represented the West Bethlehem voters. The other thing I see here is that he represents a considerably more progressive county than Northampton, and some of his past positions would be a very hard sell to that electorate. In particular, I think his positions on immigration and crime would probably be under water in the primary, let alone a general election in Northampton County. On the flip side, if the primary electorate is feeling positive about Carol Obando-Derstine in the Congressional primary, they have very similar stories as immigrants, highly educated people, and progressives. The biggest problem here? Money. The general public likes Senator Boscola. Not only would Irons, or anyone else, need to introduce themselves and build up some name recognition with voters who don’t know them, they also would have to change the public’s mind about Boscola. In the past I’ve told people who bring this up that they would need $600k if Boscola doesn’t decide to spend against them, just to compete. I’ve got news though- Senator Boscola would absolutely spend to get her message out. That probably means it would take north of a million bucks to have a chance. I don’t see that money coming in the Lehigh Valley.
Lamar Jackson 30+ yards rushing, 200+ yards passing; Josh Allen 200+ passing; Cam Ward 150+ passing; Bo Nix 175+ passing; Joe Burrow 200+ passing; Jayden Daniels 200+ passing; Kyler Murray 200+ passing. +919.
Luis Castillo 4+ strikeouts; Jacob Misiorowski 5+ strikeouts; Max Fried 4+ strikeouts; Hunter Greene 5+ strikeouts; Framber Valdez 4+ strikeouts; Dylan Cease 5+ strikeouts. +173.
The early bird- Jaguars, Steelers, Dolphins, Cardinals, and Commanders moneyline. +816
The safeties (all individually)- Padres over Rockies, money line -240; Tigers over White Sox, money line -178; Commanders -6.5 over Giants, -104; Cardinals -6.5 over Saints, -102.
Dog picks- Giants +6 on MGM (yes, I’m hedging), -110; Browns +4.5 on MGM, -110.
The interview process with the five candidates was done by union members in Pennsylvania. According to at least one former public sector union employee with knowledge of that room, the people doing the interview were not super impressed with Crooksy, but they liked Carol Obando-Derstine a lot. Now I’m a little bit surprised there on the one hand, because no other major union has backed Carol so far, but a lot of her message does overlap with the message of SEIU, so I tend to believe it. If the folks who actually did the interview had votes that mattered to the fat cats and big whigs, they were going to be the very first union to endorse Carol in this race. Apparently the folks in the interview don’t have votes that matter though.
Apparently in the conversations to get deadbeat Bernie Sanders to endorse Crooksy, the question of who else would come out and endorse him on day one came up. Bernie allied Congressman Chris Deluzio followed him into the race, just like he followed him out here for a rally (Note dude- this is not going to get you elected statewide, but cook bro.). The Governor had apparently decided to not get involved, but was willing to offer up the Lieutenant Governor as a consolation prize. The IAFF was in, because it would be absolutely hilarious if they didn’t back their own statewide President. But Bernie wanted a little more cover. Apparently the Sanders political operation has very good relations with SEIU’s political operation these days. One conversation lead to another, and the SEIU folks down in DC leaned their weight on the SEIU folks in Pennsylvania, and Carol lost her only labor endorsement to the man called Bob “Crooksy” Brooks.
Well, it’s time. The 2025 NFL Season is here, and right about now the banner is going up in Philadelphia. Yesterday I did my pre-season prediction for every game of the season. If I ever put this into parlay form, I would not only not win money, I would be institutionalized. I decided to pick my Eagles to repeat, because I still think they have the best overall roster in football and they’re winners. Something in my gut says they lose in the NFC title game or something because they get stuck on the road, but screw it, hope springs eternal. It is a brutal schedule though.
I picked an Eagles-Bengals Super Bowl, won by the Eagles. I picked the Eagles (NFC East), Lions (NFC North), Buccaneers (NFC South), Rams (NFC West), Bills (AFC East), Ravens (AFC North), Texans (AFC South), and Chiefs (AFC West) to win their divisions. I’m calling C.J. Stroud my dark horse pick for MVP.
I absolutely don’t care who the Eagles beat in the Super Bowl, anyone is fine with me. If we don’t win, I could live with watching the Bills, Ravens, Lions, or Bengals winning one, but I don’t think they will. I do want an Eagles-Chiefs III Super Bowl, and this time I want a 56-0 shut out so that Mahomes, Andy, and Travis can get one more ass whooping from this group. They need to pay dearly for the stolen championship of 2022.
Back in training camp, I tried my first hand at ranking the Quarterbacks of the NFL. A lot has changed since. No one has a QB4 now. Almost no one has a QB3. Every team has named their starter now. There’s a lot more clarity. Now that we got through that, I figured it was time to try my hand again.
Zeke, in happier times, at one of my Dad’s shows, with my Dad and Uncle.
On Monday, the news broke around town that Palmer Township Supervisor, owner of Easton Beverage, and longtime youth football coach in Palmer, Charles “Zeke” Bellis had been found dead. While I knew Zeke was having some health issues, it was a shock. I’ve known Zeke back to when I was in second grand and out playing football in the township. I knew the guy so long to be on both sides of it with him at different times. I’ll tell you what though, that was one helluva guy. Here’s what I wrote about his death on Facebook a couple of days ago:
I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the passing of Zeke today. When public officials and political operatives I know die, I go back and read throughgh our texts, looking to see what I missed in real time about them. In this case I missed nothing. Zeke was who I thought, and maybe I didn’t appreciate that enough. I knew Zeke as the good guy and the bad guy at different points. He was always just him though. He was devoted to Palmer Township, and Easton in general. After all these years on this Earth, I appreciate the shit out of that. Someone who was exactly who he said he was, for whatever you thought of it. I enjoyed our conversations later on in life at the beer distributor, about football and local politics. Palmer should have been so lucky to have guys like that. I send my best to his mother. And my town.
I think I basically got across what I wanted to there. Zeke was a genuine article. I’ll go a half step further though. The one thing I don’t think I emphasized enough was that this guy really, really loved where he was from. He was proud to have grown up in Palmer, he was proud to have been an Easton Red Rover, and he was God damned proud as hell when his township placed their confidence in him by finally electing him. “The beer man cometh.” By God, he did.
I know a lot of politicians. They’ll put on a suit and tie for you. They’ll tell you stuff you want to hear. Increasingly, they’ll try to be what Zeke actually was- authentic, blue collar. There’s good and bad with that, but at least it’s honest. I’ll miss going down and talking to him when I buy beer.
Anyway, I felt like it was important to say a little more here. This guy was a true public servant, in the sense that he wanted to make things better for people. That’s rare these days. It wasn’t some ideological fever dream that made him coach football, or serve on the recreation board, or even serve as Supervisor. He just wanted to try his hand at doing good. He’s gone, but I’m proud of him, in the final analysis.
View his obituary here. Viewing services are 4-7pm, fittingly on a game day Friday in Easton. RIP.
Meet union busting, carpetbagger Republican Ryan Crosswell. I’m sorry you have to, but he and his rich Republican friends are trying to buy him a seat in Congress. His manager claims PA-7 is accepting him with open arms, but every single donor he has but one was from outside of the district. Of course, if his manager has his way, you probably don’t really understand where the district is. Honestly, if you listen to Crosswell’s out-of-touch manager, you might actually believe the sky is green.
Crosswell’s manager either doesn’t know that Pottsville is not in the 7th Congressional District, or doesn’t want you to know it’s in the 9th District. Just read the response he gave to attacks on his lack of any connection to our community.
Grimshaw added Crosswell was a “lifelong Republican that suddenly changed his thinking and became a Democrat to run in our district… [and] to my knowledge, until recently, he never even lived here.”
Worob noted Crosswell grew up in Pottsville.
“Like a lot of Pennsylvanians, Ryan left the state for public service. He joined the Marine Corps, then served as a federal prosecutor,” Worob said.
“He has spent his life serving his country, because that’s what people from here do — they put others before themselves. And like many people who leave Pennsylvania to serve, he decided to come home when his service was over.
“The people of the Lehigh Valley and this district have welcomed him with open arms.”
Again, who the hell is welcoming him with open arms? All of his donors don’t live here and absolutely no one is endorsing him. Second, Ryan Crosswell did not “come home” to the Lehigh Valley. After the Marines, Crosswell moved to North Carolina to bust unions, then to Louisiana to do some Prosecuting, and then to Washington, DC to do Donald Trump’s bidding. This guy didn’t “come home,” he’s almost certainly never been to Jimmy’s Hot Dogs, or went to a show in the old “Croc Rock,” or spent an evening taking in the salad bar at the Bethlehem Diner. His home is Pottsville. That’s not here. In fact, it’s a bit of a ride.
Then there’s the whole matter of Crosswell busting unions. Here’s what his guy had to say:
“Ryan worked at a large law firm early in his career, and left that job over a decade ago to join the Department of Justice where he protected our country from fraudsters, pedophiles and corrupt politicians until the day that Donald Trump tried to force him to drop a case against one of his cronies,” Worob said in a prepared statement.First off, Crosswell started buying domains for a Congressional campaign years before Eric Adams was even charged with a crime. Potato, Poh-tat-oh, right? But let’s talk about what Ryan Crosswell says he did at Littler-Mendelson:
McClure noted candidate and former federal prosecutor Ryan Crosswell‘s work with Littler Mendelson — “the largest union-avoidance law firm in the United States,” according to McClure, who is Northampton County executive.
“This firm made millions helping corporations crush organizing efforts,” he said. “That’s not someone who shares labor’s values or belongs in a Democratic primary.”
Crosswell’s campaign manager Noa Worob said Crosswell never worked on a case that involved union busting.
Here’s the truth though- Crosswell got out of law school and took a job at a firm that does major union busting activities. He literally says he didn’t bust unions, he just sued employees to enforce non-compete agreements that are straight up predatory in nature. It’s disgusting. Of course when Crosswell went to that firm, he registered to vote as a Republican. He registered as a Republican in North Carolina before the 2012 Election, probably helping Mitt Romney beat Barack Obama there. Then he moved to Louisiana and registered as a Republican there, voting in their 2016 Republican Primary and in the general election- I’d love to know who he voted for in that Republican Primary. Then he took a job from Donald Trump and registered as a Republican in Washington, D.C. as Trump enacted the Muslim ban, appointed judges who overturned Roe v. Wade, and eventually attempted a coup on January 6th, 2021 to overturn an election. He voted in the 2020 Election as a Republican and stayed registered as a Republican even when Trump was trying to overturn our democracy and his allies on the Supreme Court were taking away a woman’s right to choose. According to the latest voting records I saw, Crosswell didn’t even return his ballot for the 2024 Election. Then he’d like you to know he became very angry and left the GOP. Honest to God.
In plain English, Ryan Crosswell worked at one of the largest union-busting law firms in America. At that firm, he says he tried to enforce predatory agreements against low wage workers to prevent them from moving jobs. He registered as a Republican multiple times, including after Trump was elected President, and voted in Republican Presidential Primaries and in general elections as a Republican. Crosswell lived everywhere but in the Lehigh Valley, and this was never his home at any point in his life.
Ryan Crosswell is a Republican. Ryan Crosswell is a carpetbagger. Ryan Crosswell screwed over the working man. He’s really hoping you’re too dumb to realize that.