What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State
An updating tracker of proposed congressional maps — and whether they might benefit Democrats or Republicans in the 2022 midterms and beyond. How this works »
Map source: Jonathan Cervas
Old map | R+2.6 |
Republican commissioners' proposal | R+2.7 |
Democratic commissioners' proposal | R+3.9 |
Empire Center for Public Policy proposal | R+3.9 |
"Names" draft plan | R+4.5 |
"Letters" draft plan | R+4.7 |
New York Democrats' proposal | R+5.4 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal | R+5.5 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 2 | R+5.7 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 3 | R+5.7 |
Ari Spinoza proposal | R+5.8 |
Proposed remedial map | R+5.9 |
Previously enacted proposal | R+6.0 |
Democratic proposal | R+6.0 |
New map | R+6.5 |
Republican plaintiffs' proposal | R+7.0 |
Wilson Prieve proposal | R+7.1 |
Common Cause proposal | R+7.3 |
Court appointee's proposal | R+7.3 |
New York Democrats' proposal | D+8.8 |
Previously enacted proposal | D+8.6 |
Democratic proposal | D+8.6 |
New map | D+5.8 |
Court appointee's proposal | D+5.4 |
Democratic commissioners' proposal | D+5.1 |
Common Cause proposal | D+4.8 |
Wilson Prieve proposal | D+4.6 |
Ari Spinoza proposal | D+2.8 |
"Letters" draft plan | D+0.8 |
Old map | R+1.3 |
Republican plaintiffs' proposal | R+1.4 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 2 | R+1.5 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 3 | R+1.5 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal | R+1.7 |
Proposed remedial map | R+2.3 |
Republican commissioners' proposal | R+3.7 |
Empire Center for Public Policy proposal | R+7.2 |
"Names" draft plan | R+10.5 |
Ari Spinoza proposal | 5/26 |
Court appointee's proposal | 5/26 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 3 | 5/26 |
Wilson Prieve proposal | 5/26 |
Common Cause proposal | 4/26 |
New map | 4/26 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal | 4/26 |
Stephen W. Dunn proposal 2 | 4/26 |
Republican plaintiffs' proposal | 4/26 |
Old map | 3/27 |
Empire Center for Public Policy proposal | 3/26 |
New York Democrats' proposal | 3/26 |
"Letters" draft plan | 3/26 |
"Names" draft plan | 3/26 |
Democratic commissioners' proposal | 3/26 |
Republican commissioners' proposal | 3/26 |
Proposed remedial map | 3/26 |
Previously enacted proposal | 2/26 |
Democratic proposal | 2/26 |
District | Partisan lean | Racial makeup |
---|---|---|
1st | R+10 | |
2nd | D+1 | |
3rd | D+1 | |
4th | D+10 | |
5th | D+62 | |
6th | D+31 | |
7th | D+61 | |
8th | D+49 | |
9th | D+57 | |
10th | D+62 | |
11th | R+5 | |
12th | D+68 | |
13th | D+77 | |
14th | D+57 | |
15th | D+71 | |
16th | D+40 | |
17th | D+7 | |
18th | D+2 | |
19th | R+1 | |
20th | D+12 | |
21st | R+15 | |
22nd | D+2 | |
23rd | R+21 | |
24th | R+22 | |
25th | D+13 | |
26th | D+16 |
The racial makeup of each district is of the voting-age population.
The latest in New York
Just before midnight May 20, a New York state court approved a new congressional map drawn by a court-appointed neutral expert, Jonathan Cervas. Cervas’s map has an efficiency gap of D+6 and creates 16 Democratic-leaning seats, six Republican-leaning seats and four highly competitive seats. This represents an increase of one highly competitive seat, a decrease of one Democratic-leaning seat and a decrease of one Republican-leaning seat compared with the old map.
The new map pits some high-profile Democratic incumbents against each other in the New York City area, like Reps. Carolyn Maloney and Jerrold Nadler in the new 12th District in Upper Manhattan. Meanwhile, Rep. Mondaire Jones has announced he will run in the newly drawn 10th District (representing parts of Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan) to avoid a primary against Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney in the district he currently represents. The state’s primaries will be held Aug. 23.
Cervas’s appointment came after the New York Court of Appeals struck down a previous map passed by Democratic legislators, which the court found to be an extreme Democratic gerrymander. That map was designed to give Democrats a huge advantage in the state and was largely approved along partisan lines in the legislature. The map had an efficiency gap of D+9 and created 20 Democratic-leaning seats, only four Republican-leaning seats and two highly competitive seats (both of which tilted toward Democrats themselves).
New York wound up with such an egregiously biased map only because of the weakness of New York’s new bipartisan redistricting commission. Under state law, the legislature may simply draw its own map after rejecting the commission’s first two proposals. Even worse, the commission didn’t even work as intended. Its first proposal was actually two maps (one favoring Democrats and one favoring Republicans), and it failed to come to any agreement on a second-round proposal, handing redistricting control to the legislature by default.
Latest changes 🤖
May 20, 2022
May 20, 2022
May 18, 2022
May 16, 2022
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