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New York Is Ordered by Appeals Court to Redraw House Map

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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A New York appeals court on Thursday ordered the state’s congressional map to be redrawn, siding with Democrats in a case that could give the party a fresh chance to tilt one of the nation’s most contested House battlegrounds leftward.
Wading into a long-simmering legal dispute, the Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court in Albany said that the competitive, court-drawn districts put in place for last year’s midterms had only been a temporary fix.
They ordered the state’s bipartisan redistricting commission to promptly restart a process that would effectively give the Democrat-dominated State Legislature final say over the contours of New York’s 26 House seats for the remainder of the decade.
“We direct the I.R.C. to commence its duties forthwith,” Elizabeth A. Garry, the presiding justice, wrote in the majority opinion, referring to the Independent Redistricting Commission. Two members of the five-judge panel dissented.
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Republicans vowed to appeal, leaving a final decision to the state’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, just a year after it stopped an earlier attempt by Democrats to gerrymander the maps.

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New district maps in 2022 helped Republicans flip four Democratic House seats in New York.Credit...Gabby Jones for The New York Times


Why It Matters​

The decision by the appellate court has potentially far-reaching implications.
The current district lines were drawn by a neutral court-appointed expert last spring to maximize competition. The new map served that purpose, helping Republicans flip four seats en route to taking control of the House.
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If Thursday’s ruling stands, both parties believe Democrats could conceivably draw maps that pass legal muster while making re-election almost impossible for incumbent Republicans like Representatives Mike Lawler and Marc Molinaro in the Hudson Valley, and Anthony D’Esposito and George Santos on Long Island and in Queens, among others.
New Democratic seats in New York could help offset gains Republicans are expected to make in North Carolina, where a newly conservative top court is allowing the party to replace a more neutral map.

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Background​

The legal fight over New York’s lines traces back to 2014, when voters adopted a constitutional amendment that outlawed gerrymandering and created a new bipartisan redistricting commission intended to minimize partisan mapmaking.

The first time the commission set out to draw district lines last year, though, it deadlocked between equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats. When the commission failed to even meet to complete its work, Democratic leaders in the Legislature commandeered the process and adopted lines giving Democrats clear advantages.
Republicans sued, and the Court of Appeals ruled that Democrats had not only gerrymandered the maps impermissibly, but also violated the 2014 redistricting procedures. It stripped the Legislature of its mapmaking authority, vesting it in the neutral expert.
The question before the courts now is whether those maps were meant to be temporary. Democrats filed a lawsuit last year, paid for by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in Washington, arguing that was the case, and asking the court to force the bipartisan commission to complete its work.
Though the commission would have the first shot at drawing the new maps under Thursday’s ruling, both parties expected the evenly divided panel to deadlock again. That would send the final mapmaking authority back to the Legislature — only this time with the blessing of the courts.
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Republicans are trying to block that possibility. A lower court judge sided with Republicans and dismissed the suit last September.
“New York Democrats are attempting a blatant partisan power grab thinly disguised as a court case,” said Jack Pandol, a spokesman for House Republicans’ campaign arm. “Republicans will appeal to protect the will of the voters of New York, and we will fight to hold the line in the Empire State.”

What’s Next​

The Court of Appeals is now likely to once again have the final say.
The seven-judge court was skeptical of Democrats a year ago, and could view the current lawsuit as an attack on its earlier ruling. But the bench has also moved decidedly leftward since then, and it is now led by a liberal chief judge, Rowan D. Wilson, who dissented

 
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