The Record (Troy, NY)

Bipartisan­ship stumbles on New York redistrict­ing panel

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK» Democrats on New York’s redistrict­ing commission threw up their hands Monday, a day before a bipartisan panel — apparently in name only — was to submit redrawn congressio­nal boundaries to state lawmakers.

That means the Legislatur­e, which is overwhelmi­ngly controlled by Democrats, can now seize control over a reapportio­nment process voters hoped would minimize gerrymande­ring.

“We have negotiated with our Republican colleagues in good faith for two years to achieve a single consensus plan. At every step, they have refused to agree to a compromise,” the commission’s Democratic members said in a statement they released Monday morning.

A Republican response was not immediatel­y available.

The redistrict­ing commission had been mired in partisansh­ip, and many had lost hope it could come up with a bipartisan proposal in its first outing since New York voters establishe­d it in 2014.

While Republican­s control redistrict­ing across huge swaths of the country, New York is a rare place where Democrats wield extraordin­ary power over the redrawing of congressio­nal lines. How the state carves out its congressio­nal districts could decide control over the U.S. House.

Even as the Empire State will see its representa­tion in the House drop from 27 to 26 under the latest Census maps, Democrats could potentiall­y gain seats in the New York delegation.

The commission had until Tuesday to come up with new maps agreeable to state lawmakers, who earlier this month rejected the commission’s most recent proposals. That was expected, considerin­g the commission submitted two sets of plans — one favoring Democrats, and the other Republican­s — underscori­ng deep divides.

“The whole thing is frustratin­g and unfortunat­e, and it could have been a much better process,” Steven Romalewski, director of the CUNY Graduate Center’s Mapping Service, said before Monday’s developmen­t,

The apparent outcome is that Democratic lawmakers, who have supermajor­ities in both legislativ­e chambers, will get to draw their own maps — which Republican­s charge has always been their rival party’s game plan.

A federal court drew lines the last time around, after the Assembly and state Senate failed to break an impasse over new lines. At the time, Republican­s controlled New York’s Senate.

Republican­s expect the new maps to land in court yet again.

“They want to slam through a gerrymande­red map,” Nick Langworthy, the state Republican Party chairman, told The AP last week. “Some of the geniuses in the Democratic Party in Washington would like to see them strip us down to perhaps two or three seats.”

The stakes couldn’t be any higher. If Republican’s can wrest the gavel from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, it would thwart Biden’s policy agenda heading into 2024.

“Pelosi looks to California, Illinois and New

York to solve the problems that she has to maintain the gavel,” Langworthy said. “I don’t think that a strategy like that is going to work.”

Democrats hold a 19-8 advantage in the state’s 27-member congressio­nal delegation.

Reps. Tom Reed and John Katko, both upstate Republican­s, have said they wouldn’t seek reelection.

Republican­s concede that the loss of two incumbents could offset some expected Republican gains elsewhere.

Republican­s worry that Democrats could gerrymande­r their way into gaining as many as four or five seats.

The shift in the state’s population from rural to urban is especially problemati­c for Republican­s. That means the state’s power center is further gravitatin­g toward New York City, a bastion for national liberalism, which saw its population surge 629,000 new residents to 8.8 million.

That could dilute Republican influence in the country’s most populous megapolis and possibly erode GOP control of districts on Long Island and Staten Island.

“There’s many instances where they’ve ignored the input that was given to them during public hearings. They gerrymande­red lots of different communitie­s of color seemingly in an attempt to protect incumbents,” said Asher Ross, who directs a redistrict­ing

advocacy campaign called “Mapping our Future” for the New York Immigratio­n Coalition.

Ross said Democrats’ attempt to weaken U.S. Rep. Nicole Malliotaki­s, a Republican from Staten Island,

would come at the expense of a largely Latino and Asian American community in Brooklyn that could wind up in what is now her district.

The Democratic plan would also redraw lines for the district now held by U.S. Rep. Nydia Velazquez. The proposal would cleave Asian American voters in Manhattan’s Chinatown from those in Brooklyn.

The Republican proposal, on the other hand, would preserve the continuity of the Asian American vote in Velazquez’s current district.

Meanwhile, Democrats and Republican­s are wrangling over where lines should be drawn for the district currently held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, whose Hudson Valley district is almost evenly split between the parties.

A super PAC called No Surrender NY, which aims to preserve and expand Democratic representa­tion, suggested the Legislatur­e’s supermajor­ity should use the opportunit­y to push back against the far right.

The PAC urged Democratic lawmakers in the statehouse “to reject a false ‘bipartisan’ framework that demands compromise with the far right ideology of today’s New York Republican­s.”

The 2014 voter referendum banned partisan gerrymande­ring, and said the redistrict­ing maps could not favor or disfavor political parties or candidates.

New Yorkers could file lawsuits arguing the maps are tainted by partisan gerrymande­ring in state court but would face a high bar, according to New York Law School professor Jeffrey Wice.

“It’s very difficult to challenge redistrict­ing plans in New York because courts have provided a lot of deference to state legislativ­ely drawn maps,” Wice said.

 ?? HANS PENNINK-ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? View of the New York state Assembly Chamber as members meet on the opening day of the 2021 legislativ­e session at the state Capitol in Albany, N.Y. Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021.
HANS PENNINK-ASSOCIATED PRESS View of the New York state Assembly Chamber as members meet on the opening day of the 2021 legislativ­e session at the state Capitol in Albany, N.Y. Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States