The Washington State Senate stepped far outside the usual boundaries of sports commentary on Monday, declaring in dramatic fashion what a large portion of the Pacific Northwest has been arguing since MVP ballots were revealed: Cal Raleigh was robbed.
In an extraordinary and tongue-in-cheek resolution that nevertheless landed with real force, lawmakers formally stated that the Seattle Mariners’ catcher deserved to be named the American League’s Most Valuable Player after a season that redefined what was thought possible at his position. It was a moment equal parts humor, pride, and pointed criticism — and it instantly reignited one of the offseason’s most heated debates.
Raleigh finished a narrow second in AL MVP voting after authoring one of the most historic offensive seasons in Major League Baseball history. The switch-hitting catcher blasted 60 home runs, the most ever by a catcher, while also breaking Mickey Mantle’s long-standing record for home runs by a switch-hitter in a single season. He set a new Mariners franchise record in the process, all while shouldering the daily physical toll of the most demanding defensive position on the field.

It still wasn’t enough.
New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge took home his second consecutive MVP after another monumental offensive year of his own, and few questioned Judge’s greatness. But in Seattle — and now, officially, in Olympia — the belief is that context mattered, and that Raleigh’s season was something entirely different.
As the Senate honored the Mariners on the chamber floor, manager Dan Wilson and longtime broadcaster Rick Rizzs sat on the dais alongside Lieutenant Governor Denny Heck. What followed was a reading that felt less like a legislative formality and more like a rallying cry.
“WHEREAS, Cal Raleigh, despite setting the MLB record for home runs by a catcher in a season, shattering Mickey Mantle’s record for home runs by a switch hitter, setting a new Mariners home run record, and playing the most physically demanding position on the baseball field, was robbed by national baseball writers when they did not choose him as the American League Most Valuable Player,” the resolution read, drawing laughter and applause as it entered the official record.
The laughter did not obscure the message.
Senator Mark Schoesler, R-Ritzville, who sponsored the resolution, dispensed with any subtlety when given the floor.
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“Cal was robbed,” Schoesler said bluntly. “That East Coast media doesn’t know anything.”
The remark, half-joke and half-indictment, captured a sentiment Mariners fans know all too well — the feeling that Seattle excellence often needs to shout louder to be heard nationally.
President of Baseball Operations Jerry Dipoto and general manager Justin Hollander watched from the gallery as lawmakers celebrated the team. No players were present, but Raleigh hardly needed to be. His season had already spoken loudly enough.
Much of the ceremony turned personal, revealing just how deeply the Mariners are woven into the fabric of Washington life. Schoesler spoke of listening to Rick Rizzs’ familiar voice on the radio while working his farm fields. Senator Judy Warnick recalled her mother-in-law meticulously keeping score of Mariners games at 100 years old. Senator Mike Chapman shared a memory of his son, then nine, serving as junior broadcaster of the day with Rizzs — a moment Chapman said inspired his son to pursue baseball at a high level for years.
Senator Bob Hasegawa highlighted the Mariners’ cultural impact, particularly within the Japanese-American community.
“The fact that we had Ichiro and others who were breaking the ice so players could be introduced into America, I think the Mariners deserve a lot of thanks for that,” Hasegawa said.
The moment also served as a reminder that the Mariners’ bond with the state goes far beyond wins and losses. In 1995, the Washington Legislature approved funding for what is now T-Mobile Park after voters rejected a bond measure, a decision that likely saved the franchise from relocation. Years later, lawmakers again stepped in to support a new ballpark for the Single-A Everett AquaSox, reinforcing that connection.

All of it framed Raleigh’s MVP snub not just as a statistical argument, but as a matter of identity and respect.
The sting remains fresh because the Mariners came agonizingly close to something even bigger. They fell in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series last year, one win short of the franchise’s first World Series appearance. Raleigh was at the heart of that run, a symbol of toughness, power, and belief for a team that now enters 2026 carrying heavy expectations.
Spring Training begins this month in Arizona, and the Mariners will once again try to prove that last season was not an outlier, but a foundation. Whether or not an MVP trophy ever reaches Raleigh’s hands, his impact has already crossed into rare territory — so much so that a state Senate felt compelled to put it on record.
For Mariners fans, the message was clear and validating. The debate may be over nationally, but in Washington, the verdict is unanimous.