Nadler Vs. Maloney? Primary Battle Could Ensue If Draft District Maps Approved

An analyst said the maps were much fairer and more competitive than the gerrymandered maps drawn up by the Legislature. Yet the maps seem to be drawn with little regard to incumbency.

Representative Jerrold Nadler, joined at left by Representative Carolyn Maloney, in 2019. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, fIle

If approved, a draft of new congressional maps for New York would force a primary battle between two longtime Democratic U.S. representatives, Jerrold Nadler and Carolyn Maloney.

The new maps released Monday by a court-appointed official would significantly redraw the Manhattan districts currently held by Mr. Nadler and Ms. Maloney, who have each served in the House for nearly three decades and head up influential committees.

Ms. Maloney, who currently represents the 12th District, said she would run again under the 12th’s new boundaries. Mr. Nadler, who represents the 10th, said he too would run in the 12th if the draft becomes permanent. Nadler said he believes the draft lines unconstitutionally break up existing districts and communities.

The maps would also significantly shake up the districts currently held by two other Democratic U.S. representatives, Mondaire Jones and Sean Patrick Maloney.

“A lot of incumbents are going to have some choices to make about whether they run and what district they run in,” a Brennan Center for Justice redistricting analyst, Michael Li, said.

Mr. Li said the new maps are much fairer and more competitive, including in areas like Long Island, than the gerrymandered maps drawn up by the Legislature.

Yet the maps seem to be drawn with little regard to incumbency, which Mr. Li said could be something that the court is persuaded to change before giving final approval. He said redistricting rules in New York’s constitution requires that the core of each district be preserved as much as possible.

“There might be an argument in New York City that the districts changed too much,” Mr. Li said.

An analyst at the Empire Center, Cam Macdonald, told The New York Sun that at first glance “the congressional map appears to be much more non-partisan and fair than the map produced by the Legislature.”

He added that the court-appointed “Special Master” has “prioritized the most important parts of redistricting, starting with the voters and minimized the least important parts, like politics and incumbency.”

In general, the proposed redrawn districts are more favorable to Republicans than the earlier maps drawn by Democrats.

The draft maps released Monday would help the GOP by creating five districts that lean Republican and at least four other districts where Republicans would be competitive. 

Maps drawn up by the Democratically controlled state Legislature as part of the redistricting process occurring every 10 years would have given Democrats a strong majority in 22 of 26 congressional districts, starting with this year’s election, but those maps were struck down by a court.

Currently, the state has 27 congressional districts but is losing one as a result of the 2020 census. Republicans hold eight of those seats.

The proposed maps could also pit several incumbents against each other or force them to run in new areas.

The new maps are a blow to national Democrats’ plans to draw favorable maps in New York in order to maximize the number of seats they could win in the House of Representatives.

Last month, New York’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, ruled those maps and maps for the state Senate were unconstitutional and failed to abide by an anti-gerrymandering process approved by voters.

Under a process passed by voters in 2014, New York’s new district maps were supposed to have been drawn by an independent commission. But that body, made up of equal numbers of Democrats and Republicans, couldn’t agree on one set of maps. The Democrat-controlled Legislature then stepped in and created its own maps, quickly signed into law by Governor Hochul, a Democrat.

The appeals court, made up of judges appointed entirely by Democratic governors, sided with the Republican plaintiffs who argued the Legislature sidestepped the process set forth in the 2014 reforms, including a provision in the state constitution barring the redrawing of districts for partisan gain.

A former Republican congressman, John Faso, serving as an advisor to the petitioners who brought the lawsuit, said in a statement that the draft plan is better than the Democrat-drawn maps, but his team will ask the court to make revisions “which better reflect long-standing communities of interest around the state.”

A New York court will take comment on the maps for two days before a final version is approved by a judge on May 20, with primary elections for congressional races and the state Senate now being held August 23.

Adding to the redistricting tangle, the state’s Assembly and gubernatorial primaries are still scheduled for June 28.

The Court of Appeals didn’t order the drawing of new Assembly maps because a group of GOP voters who sued over the redistricting process didn’t specifically challenge them in their lawsuit. They only went after the maps for United States House and state Senate seats.

But a new lawsuit is attempting to condense all the election dates and toss out the state’s Assembly maps as well, arguing those are unconstitutional.


The New York Sun

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