The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

NEW VOTING DAY

Judge delays some New York primaries after court tosses maps

- By Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y. » A New York judge ordered Friday that the state’s congressio­nal and state Senate primaries be delayed until Aug. 23 to provide enough time to replace district maps that were ruled unconstitu­tional this week.

State Judge Patrick Mcallister moved the primaries back from their original date of June 28. He said the independen­t expert he tasked with helping him craft new maps, special master Jonathan Cervas, will finish drawing districts by May 20.

New York is set to separately hold gubernator­ial and state Assembly primaries in June, unless lawmakers or Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, decide to delay. New York once held congressio­nal and state office primaries on separate dates, but lawmakers in 2019 consolidat­ed them to save money, increase voter turnout and make the process less confusing for the public.

On Wednesday, New York’s highest court rejected new congressio­nal and state senate maps that had widely been seen as favoring Democrats. The majority decision largely agreed with Republican voters who argued the congressio­nal district boundaries were unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red.

The Republican­s also successful­ly argued that lawmakers lacked the authority to draw the congressio­nal and state Senate maps in the first place. Voters in 2014 approved an anti-gerrymande­ring constituti­onal amendment that created an independen­t redistrict­ing commission. But the Republican and Democratic commission­ers failed to agree on a single set of maps, so lawmakers decided to draw the maps themselves.

The court’s rejection dashed Democrats’ national redistrict­ing hopes, which leaned heavily on their ability to gerrymande­r New York state to maximize the number of seats they could win in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

Cervas, who is drawing the newest maps, previously helped create legislativ­e district maps for Pennsylvan­ia’s Legislativ­e Reapportio­nment Commission.

A state board of elections spokespers­on said Thursday the state was asking the U.S. Justice Department if a federal court needs to review a delay of the federal primary. The spokespers­on said Friday attorneys were still reviewing the matter.

New York is set to separately hold gubernator­ial and state Assembly primaries in June, unless lawmakers or Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, decide to delay.

 ?? HANS PENNINK, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A partial view of the New York state Capitol building, left, is shown next to the state Appellate court building in foreground, right, in Albany, N.Y.
HANS PENNINK, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A partial view of the New York state Capitol building, left, is shown next to the state Appellate court building in foreground, right, in Albany, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States