Yuma Sun

Judge restores New York Democratic presidenti­al primary

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NEW YORK — The New York Democratic presidenti­al primary must take place June 23 because canceling it would be unconstitu­tional and deprive withdrawn presidenti­al candidates Bernie Sanders and Andrew Yang of proper representa­tion at the Democratic convention, a judge ruled Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres in Manhattan ruled after lawyers for Sanders and Yang argued Monday that they otherwise would be harmed irreparabl­y.

The judge said there was enough time before the primary to plan how to carry it out safely. She acknowledg­ed that the reason it was canceled — to prevent the spread of COVID-19 — was an important state interest but said she was unconvince­d it justified infringing rights, especially since every voter can use an absentee ballot. She noted that no other state had canceled its primary.

Torres wrote that removing presidenti­al contenders from the primary ballot deprived them of votes for the Democratic Party’s nomination. She said it also diminished the delegates’ influence on the party’s platform and their ability to react to unexpected convention developmen­ts.

It also “deprived Democratic voters of the opportunit­y to elect delegates who could push their point of view in that forum,” she said. “The loss of these First Amendment rights is a heavy hardship.”

The Democratic members of the State’s Board of Elections voted last week to cancel the presidenti­al primary even though New York still planned to hold its congressio­nal and statelevel primaries June 23.

They cited fears the coronaviru­s could spread among an extra 1.5 million voters who would show up for an election in which former Vice President Joe Biden already has been endorsed by the major candidates he had faced.

The fact that the primary was going to occur on June 23 anyway because of other contested races, including a number of congressio­nal primaries, led Torres to question on Monday why the primary wasn’t canceled entirely if safety was such a concern.

Asked for reaction, New York state Democratic party chair Jay Jacobs said: “We are reviewing it.”

Jacobs had called holding the primary “unnecessar­y” with the suspension of Sanders’ campaign and said reduced turnout could reduce the need for many poll workers.

State board of elections spokesman John Conklin said: “No comment at this time. Our lawyers are reviewing the decision.”

Biden’s campaign declined to comment. The campaign has kept its distance from the situation, not wanting to become embroiled in a new fight over nearly 300 delegates to the summer convention and saying the campaign didn’t ask for the primary to be scrapped.

Biden became the presumptiv­e nominee when Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign last month, but Sanders had made clear that he wanted to continue collecting delegates from remaining primaries, including in New York, to maximize his influence over the party platform and other decisions at the Democratic convention this summer.

Biden’s campaign did not want to be seen as stepping on Sanders’ efforts to do that in a state like New York, where the Vermont senator maintains a significan­t following.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JAN. 7, file photograph, presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden gestures during a foreign policy statement in New York.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JAN. 7, file photograph, presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden gestures during a foreign policy statement in New York.

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