New congressional map in New York approved by judge

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New York Judge Patrick McAllister have finally approved the court appointed special master’s new congressional map for the state late Friday night.

Among some of the changes made in the latest New York congressional map included placing the communities of Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant fully in the 9th and 8th Congressional Districts respectively, instead of splitting them up.

The Empire State will now have at least one incumbent-versus-incumbent House primary as longtime Reps. Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney will both run for the new 12th Congressional District in Manhattan.

However, some other member-vs.-member primaries seem to have been avoided as Rep. Mondaire Jones, who currently represents a suburban seat north of New York City, announced he would run in the new 10th District — a seat that merges parts of lower Manhattan and Brooklyn — leaving Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney without an incumbent primary challenger in the new 17th District. The open 10th District has attracted a wave of interest from local politicians, including from former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who announced a run on Friday, and state Assemblywoman Yuh-Line Niou, who entered the race a day later.

McAllister defended the special master’s draft and final proposals, writing in the court order that “unfortunately some people have encouraged the public to believe that now the court gets to create its own gerrymandered maps that favor Republicans.”

He said that with the state’s 2012-drawn lines, eight Republicans were elected to Congress and the initial Democratic-drawn map for this round of redistricting “would have only favored four Republicans being elected.”

The judge said the new map would create “eight competitive districts” and “three districts in which Republicans will likely win.”

“The restoration of the iconic neighborhood of Bedford Stuyvesant into one Congressional District is a small step,”

“We will not let modest changes to a severely flawed draft map whitewash the violence done to communities of color throughout New York City.” Jeffries mentioned in a statement

The special master’s final map also included changes on Long Island. Republicans will likely continue to have a stronghold in the 2nd District, represented by GOP Rep. Andrew Garbarino.

Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis’ Staten Island-based seat, which Democrats had tried to redraw to favor them, will remain Republican-leaning and not include more liberal parts of Brooklyn.

New York will have 26 congressional districts after losing a seat in reapportionment following the 2020 census. In April, the Democratic-drawn map was blocked by the state’s highest court.

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