© 2024 WRVO Public Media
NPR News for Central New York
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Task of drawing NY political maps falls to judge and scholar

stgermh
/
Flickr

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — After New York’s highest court threw out new congressional district maps drawn by the state Legislature, the task of redrawing them has fallen to a rural judge and a researcher at Carnegie Mellon University.

Democrats’ hopes of crafting an electoral map heavily favorable to their party suffered a big blow Wednesday when the state Court of Appeals ruled that the Legislature’s maps were unconstitutionally gerrymandered.

The judges said the Legislature also didn’t have unilateral authority to create its own Congressional and state Senate maps, after the state’s Independent Redistricting Commission — made up of an equal number of Republicans and Democrats — failed to produce a consensus map of its own.

The high court handed responsibility for creating a new set of maps to state Judge Patrick McAllister — the lower-court jurist who had initially declared the maps unconstitutional. Anticipating that higher courts would agree with him, McAllister had already chosen an independent expert to help him craft the maps, Jonathan Cervas, a postdoctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon University’s Institute for Politics and Strategy.

The western Pennsylvania native now faces a tight deadline to come up with his own set of maps, for McAllister to review and approve.

Democrats, Republicans and “other interested parties” had until April 22 to submit proposed Congressional maps to Cervas and the court. The court is accepting responses on those submissions until Friday, and plans to hold a hearing May 6.

Under the judge’s schedule, Cervas would have to produce a draft map by May 16. The final version would have to be done no later than May 24.

On Thursday, state elections commissioners asked the judge to stick to that schedule, or even speed it up, if the state is to meet a series of legal deadlines before the November election.

New York’s primaries, for all races on the ballot this year, had been scheduled for June 28. The state is still expected to hold primaries in the contests for governor and state Assembly on that date, but it appeared likely that primaries for congress and state Senate would have to be moved to August.

That schedule would allow time to adopt new maps, send correct information to voters, finish the candidate petitioning process, and comply with federal voting laws. Ballots for military and overseas voters must get mailed out at least 45 days before a primary.

In past years, New York held primaries as late as September.

“You can’t turn a statewide election around on a dime or in a month,” said New York Law School professor and redistricting expert Jeffrey Wice.

State Board of Elections Commissioners Brian Quail and Kimberly Galvin asked McAllister to expedite the approval process for new maps to give local election officials enough time to prepare for Aug. 23 primary based on new maps adopted May 24 — the ones Cervas is now working on.

“In that 46 day span, boards of elections must update their voter registration systems and implement ballot access procedures and all ballot access issues must be fully resolved,” Quail and Galvin wrote to McAllister.

Lawmakers can pass legislation to delay the primary to August. A state Board of Elections spokesperson, John Conklin, said the judge could also decide a date without needing legislative approval.

One potential wrinkle in rescheduling the primary could be a decade-old court order that the state’s congressional primaries be held the fourth Tuesday in June. Conklin said state elections officials believed that order contained enough flexibility for the date of the vote to be moved, although the state would be consulting with the U.S. Justice Department to see if a federal court might need to review any change.

Legislative leaders and Gov. Kathy Hochul didn’t immediately provide a response Thursday when asked if they would move to reschedule the primary.

As for potentially appealing the Court of Appeals decision striking down the Legislature’s maps, Wice said Democrats have “no real option.”

Democrats could, he said, adopt a strategy used by Republicans in North Carolina.

In February, North Carolina Republicans asked the U.S. Supreme Court to block a congressional redistricting plan that state judges drew.

The GOP legislative leaders argued the state judges had overstepped their authority because the U.S. Constitution gives state lawmakers the power to determine the manner of holding U.S. House elections. The Supreme Court is set to weigh that question in their fall term beginning in October.

But Wice said he doesn’t recommend that New York Democrats mimic a strategy that he said calls into question state courts’ authority to invalidate other laws passed by lawmakers.

Democrats could also sue to challenge maps adopted by the state court, according to Columbia Law School professor Richard Briffault.