LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Time for honest redistricting

Posted

To the Editor:

Up until the 1970 reapportionment, NYC Congressional districts were usually 100 percent within the borough. The same was true for Long Island and virtually all of the other 57 counties outside of NYC.

Cities and towns were not split between districts. Today, too many districts in New York City divide neighborhoods and cross borough boundaries, sometimes into adjacent suburban counties. In several cases, boundaries were drawn to create majority minority districts. This was to insure a particular ethnic group could elect one of their own.  

In 1812, Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed a redistricting bill allowing his party to rig the drawing of district boundaries in their favor. This practice is known as gerrymandering today. With the results of the 2020 census, will Gov. Kathy Hochul, state Senate majority leader Andrea Steward Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie give up their goal to create as many favorable districts to assist Democrats in regaining control of Congress?

As of November 2023, according to the state Board of Elections, there are 5,886,085 Democrats, 2,696,999 Republicans, 154,034 Conservatives, 49,586 Working Families, 375,163, Other, 2,878,289 Blank (no declared party) for a total of 12,040,156 active voters.

In Bronx County, there are 534,576 Democrats, 43,496 Republicans, 2,967 Conservatives, 2,994 Working Families, 12,099 Other, 273,068 blank  for a total of 725,515 active voters.

The numbers show that Democrats have nothing to fear from an honest reapportionment for Congressional district boundaries. Why not allow the League of Women votersto redraw district boundaries to prevent one party stacking the deck in their favor?  

State law requires that state legislative districts be contiguous and compact. State legislative districts must also take into account the “historic and traditional significance of counties.”

Larry Penner

redistricting, Bronx, Congress, New York City,

Comments