New York Daily News

Map flap may give Andy shot

Suit seeks one date for votes in Albany & Congress contests

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

ALBANY — A federal lawsuit filed Thursday seeking to combine all of New York’s primaries in August could open the door for ex-governor Andrew Cuomo to take another shot at running for his old office.

The legal challenge is the latest to take issue with the current plan to hold statewide and Assembly primary contests in June and congressio­nal and state Senate primaries in August after the state’s highest court struck down Democrat-drawn district lines.

The League of Women Voters argues in the suit that the Board of Elections unlawfully certified primary ballots for statewide races, including the governor’s race, since candidates collected signatures based on sincescrap­ped congressio­nal maps.

“The State Board of Elections, apparently with the support of the leaders of both major political parties, put in place a deliberate­ly exclusiona­ry electoral regime for statewide offices designed to limit further competitio­n in the primary and from independen­t candidates in the general election,” Laura Ladd Bierman, the group’s executive director, said in a statement.

The suit alleges that the Board’s actions violate New York voters’ freedom of associatio­n under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. If successful, the suit would move all of the state’s primaries to August and reopen the petitionin­g process for all races.

That could give the disgraced former governor, who resigned last year in the wake of multiple allegation­s of sexual harassment from staffers, a path to the primary ballot.

One of the petitioner­s in the suit argues in an affidavit that she should have “the ability to support and vote for other candidates beyond the candidates who are currently running in the Governor’s race.”

The petitioner, Petra Gopfert, goes on to say that she specifical­ly wants to “sign and support a petition to add Andrew Cuomo to the Democratic Party primary ballot for

Governor.”

A Cuomo spokesman declined to comment on the suit.

A separate challenge filed last week at the state level seeking to have the Assembly districts discarded and redrawn likewise calls for the reopening of petitionin­g for all races.

Gov. Hochul has repeatedly said she favors keeping the June 28 date for statewide primaries. As the Democratic Party’s preferred candidate, Hochul did not have to collect signatures to secure a spot on the ballot.

Her primary challenger­s, Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-L.I.) and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, both secured more than the 15,000 necessary signatures required.

New York’s election calendar has been thrown into chaos since the Court of Appeals struck down congressio­nal and state Senate boundaries, determinin­g that the Democrat-led Legislatur­e failed to follow procedures set out in the state Constituti­on and gerrymande­ring House districts in their favor.

A court-appointed independen­t expert

was tasked with coming up with more competitiv­e maps.

Candidates for the congressio­nal and state Senate primaries slated for Aug. 23 can begin collecting signatures as soon as this weekend once the new lines are finalized on Friday.

Meanwhile, a hearing is scheduled for next Monday in Manhattan Supreme Court where Democratic activist Gary Greenberg and Gavin Wax, the head of the New York Young Republican Club, filed theirchall­enge calling for the Assembly maps to be tossed and the state’s primary elections to be consolidat­ed.

A pair of legal filings from Greenberg and Wax were dismissed last week by acting Steuben County Supreme Court Justice Patrick McAllister, who said it was too late to redraw the Assembly lines.

The lawsuit, which also lists Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Paul Nichols as a petitioner, argues that the only fair move is to consolidat­e the primaries and redraw all districts to comply with constituti­onal requiremen­ts.

 ?? ?? Voters cast ballots in primary last June. This year the primary is in turmoil, which could aid ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo (left).
Voters cast ballots in primary last June. This year the primary is in turmoil, which could aid ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo (left).

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