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Mar 08, 2026

Supreme Court Retains GOP District

Supreme Court Retains GOP District in NY

The Supreme Court on Monday said it would keep New York’s current congressional map in place, temporarily blocking a lower court ruling that had found the map violated the Constitution by diluting the voting power of Black and Latino residents.

The unsigned emergency order did not include a vote count or written reasoning, which is typical for decisions issued on the court’s emergency docket. The decision allows the existing map to remain in place while appeals continue, making it likely the map will be used in the upcoming midterm elections, the New York Times 

The ruling was a victory for Republicans and could help them retain control of a closely divided House of Representatives.

Representative Nicole Malliotakis, a Republican whose district includes Staten Island and parts of southern Brooklyn, filed the emergency application after a state judge ordered her district to be redrawn.

In a statement, Malliotakis said the justices had “stopped the voters on Staten Island and in southern Brooklyn from being stripped of their ability to elect a representative who reflects their values.”

The case centers on New York’s 11th Congressional District, the only district in New York City currently held by a Republican.

The dispute is one of several mid-cycle redistricting battles that have reached the Supreme Court after President Donald Trump encouraged Republicans to pursue map changes that could strengthen the party’s position in Congress.

Texas redrew its congressional map, and California voters approved a ballot measure revising that state’s map in a way that favored Democrats.

In both instances, legal challenges were brought to the Supreme Court, and the justices allowed the new maps to be used for the midterms.

The New York case also unfolds as the court considers a separate voting rights dispute, Louisiana v. Callais, involving the creation of a second majority minority district in Louisiana.

A ruling in that case could have broader implications for congressional maps nationwide.

In the New York matter, the court’s three liberal justices dissented.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, wrote in a 13-page dissent that the court had inserted itself into election law disputes during an active redistricting cycle.

“By granting these applications, the court thrusts itself into the middle of every election law dispute around the country, even as many states redraw their congressional maps ahead of the 2026 election,” Sotomayor wrote.

She warned that the decision could prompt more emergency appeals “without even bothering to ask the state courts first.”

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., writing in concurrence, said he supported blocking the lower court’s order.

He wrote that the lower court had engaged in “blatantly discriminated on the basis of race,” calling it “unadorned racial discrimination” that violated the Constitution.

The legal challenge began last October when four New Yorkers sued over the district held by Malliotakis.

The lawsuit was filed by the Elias Law Group, which has represented Democratic interests in redistricting cases.

In January, Manhattan Justice Jeffrey H. Pearlman ruled that the 2024 map showed a pattern of discrimination against minority voters and ordered the state to reconvene its Independent Redistricting Commission.

 

Pearlman previously served as special counsel to Governor Kathy Hochul.

Malliotakis filed her emergency application on Feb. 12 to Justice Sotomayor, who handles emergency matters from that region.

Court filings show that the Black and Latino population in the 11th District has grown to about 30 percent, up from 11 percent over the past four decades.

Despite that demographic shift, the district has become more conservative.

It was the only New York City district won by Donald Trump in 2016, and in 2020, he carried it over Joseph R. Biden Jr. by 24 percentage points.

That same year, Malliotakis defeated incumbent Democrat Max Rose.

President Donald Trump WINS! Democrats Just Got Humiliated After Senate Republicans PASS IT

WASHINGTON, D.C. — In a stunning and decisive victory for President Donald Trump, Senate Republicans just delivered a humiliating defeat to Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

After months of grueling Democratic resistance that ground the confirmation process to a standstill, the GOP officially invoked the "nuclear option." By changing the chamber’s rules to allow executive branch nominees to be approved collectively rather than individually, Republicans successfully pushed through a massive bloc of over 100 Trump nominees in a single, sweeping action.


The Numbers Behind the Victory

The sheer scale of this confirmation event marks the largest block of approvals in modern Senate history since the rule change went into effect.

Confirmation StatisticsDetailsTotal Nominees Confirmed in Bloc107 Executive Branch NomineesSenate Vote Margin51-47 (Strict party-line vote)Previous Bloc Confirmation (Sept)48 Nominees

High-Profile Confirmations

The backlog clearance means the Trump administration is finally staffing up critical roles across the globe and domestically. Some of the most highly anticipated confirmations include:

  • Herschel Walker: The former Republican Senate candidate and football legend is officially headed to represent the United States as Ambassador to the Bahamas.

  • Sergio Gor: The former White House Presidential Personnel Office director has been authorized to serve as the U.S. Ambassador to India.

  • Jeanine Pirro: The former judge, prosecutor, and Fox News anchor successfully navigated the gauntlet to become Trump’s top prosecutor in Washington, D.C.

(Note: Cabinet secretaries and judicial nominees were exempt from this specific collective confirmation rule change and will still be processed individually).


Crushing the Blockade

The confrontation reached a boiling point after Democrats continually demanded roll call votes on even the most routine, non-controversial candidates. The stalling tactics infuriated the White House, with President Trump declaring that his nominees shouldn’t be “forced to wait” any longer.

To break the gridlock, a GOP working group spearheaded by Alabama Senator Katie Britt analyzed multiple options. While some Republicans briefly floated the idea of allowing the President to bypass the chamber entirely using recess appointments, leadership ultimately decided to deploy the "nuclear option" to permanently alter the confirmation rules by a simple majority vote.

“Everyone had been talking through various options,” Britt stated regarding the strategy. “One of the things that that process did was empower the committee process.”

"Deranged liberals cook up insane conspiracy theories when @POTUS goes 12 hours without speaking to press," the post read, adding: "Fear not! President Trump literally never stops working."

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Further adding to the clarification, CBS News White House correspondent Emma Nicholson shared an update from outside the West Wing, noting that a Marine sentry was stationed at the entrance – a traditional signal that the president is inside and working.ed


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