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‘NO PARTISAN DRAMA.’ See newest Congressional redistricting map in NY: Q: Which lines have changed? A: Very few, with minimal overall impact on party-line voting.

February 18, 2024
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The bipartisan panel has kept intact the 16th Congressional District, where Democrat Rep. Jamaal Bowman faces a primary face-off with Westchester County Executive George Latimer. The 16th covers the southern half of Westchester, plus a single neighborhood in the Bronx. ‘Gerrymandered?’

By Chris McKenna | The Journal News

A proposed shift in New York’s congressional lines could boost the re-election chances of two upstate House members and weaken those of a third.

One incumbent from each party stands to benefit from the map endorsed by a bipartisan state panel on Thursday.

Democratic Rep. Pat Ryan’s 18th District in the Hudson Valley would have an even stronger Democratic voting edge under the new lines, while Republican Rep. Marc Molinaro’s neighboring 19th District would shift to become friendlier terrain for him.

Fellow Republican Rep. Brandon Williams wouldn’t be so lucky. His Democratic-leaning 22nd District in the Syracuse area would tilt farther toward Democrats.

Other swing districts closely watched in this year’s election battles would undergo little or no change.

Republican Rep. Mike Lawler’s Hudson Valley 17th District would have no change except a line shift within a single town. Long Island’s four House districts appeared mostly or entirely untouched.

The panel also kept intact Democratic Rep. Jamaal Bowman’s 16th District, which was notable because of his looming primary battle against Westchester County Executive George Latimer. Under the revised map, the district would still consist of the southern half of Westchester and a single Bronx neighborhood.

The map approved the the redistricting panel can be seen at www.nyirc.gov/storage/plans/20240215/congressional_plan.pdf.

To compare the new map to the one used in the 2022 elections, visit www.nyirc.gov/congressional-plan-2024.

How did we get to Thursday’s redistricting vote?

The map was created and approved on Thursday by the state Independent Redistricting Commission, a 10-member panel split equally between Democratic and Republican appointees.

They were ordered in December by the state Court of Appeals — New York’s highest court — to draft new lines for the state’s 26 House districts to replace those set by a court last year after a Republicans lawsuit over gerrymandering.

The approval of a map with no partisan drama was a marked departure from the commission’s 2021 debut, when members from each party produced separate proposals and ground to a rancorous halt.

The Democrat-led legislature then drew its own lines, which were struck down in court and replaced with the map used in the 2022 elections.

This time, the panel played it safe and reached a deal on new lines behind closed doors.

“I am proud of this collaborative, bipartisan endeavor to put forth congressional districts that reflect the criteria established by state and federal law,” Ken Jenkins, the Westchester County official who serves as the commission’s chairman, said before the panel’s 9-1 votes in support.

“And I am pleased that the courts gave us this chance to make good on the constitution’s promise.”

What happens next with NY’s redistricting map?

The map must still be reviewed and either approved or replaced by state lawmakers, with little time to do so under the current political calendar.

The legislature is on recess next week, and House candidates are due to begin collecting petition signatures the following week, on Feb. 27.

Ticking clock:NY redistricting panel plans to vote on newly drawn maps Thursday. What happens next?

If approved and signed into law by Gov. Kathy Hochul, the House lines approved by the commission would be used for this fall’s congressional races and the next three elections as well.

New York and other states normally redraw their House districts once a decade after each census to adjust them for population changes. ##