New York Daily News

A line in the sand

-

The Supreme Court justices down in Washington just sent a clear message to a Supreme Court justice up in Steuben County: In assessing partisan redistrict­ing, judges should measure the lines drawn by legislatur­es against state laws and the state Constituti­on. Forgive any confusion, as in New York, Supreme Court is the basic trial court, where Acting Justice Patrick McAllister is now hearing a challenge brought by Republican­s to lines for congressio­nal and state Senate seats drawn by the Legislatur­e’s Democratic supermajor­ity and signed by Gov. Hochul. The Dems ignored maps prepared by the new state Independen­t Redistrict­ing Commission. The lawmakers, under Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, were bipartisan about it. They rejected the maps offered by the panel’s Democrats and the panel’s Republican­s in favor of their own, hyper-gerrymande­red outcome.

Once, Democrats reviled such brazen rigging of the democratic process.

New York’s GOP went to court, arguing to McAllister, quite correctly, that the adopted districts violate the state Constituti­on’s explicit prohibitio­n: “Districts shall not be drawn to discourage competitio­n or for the purpose of favoring or disfavorin­g incumbents or other particular candidates or political parties.” A blind man could see these congressio­nal districts were drawn to advantage Democrats.

So, back to Washington, where the other Supreme Court on Monday rejected Republican appeals from North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia to override state court rulings that have ordered up fairer congressio­nal districts than the GOP-controlled legislatur­es had drawn. Meaning: Go ahead Justice McAllister, and impose less gerrymande­red districts, consistent with the law and the state Constituti­on. Doing so is just fine by the highest court in the land.

McAllister has enough time to get this right. He can order new districts this year after he hears detailed evidence next Monday from experts on both sides. The June 28 primary for the re-drawn seats can easily be moved into August to provide more time and still abide by every state and federal election law. The extra cost of the additional primary can be billed to the power-grabbing Dems in the Capitol.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States