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				The divided five-judge panel upheld a key part of a ruling by a 
				lower court that the districts - which were drawn in such a way 
				that the state would have only four Republican-dominated 
				Congressional districts instead of the current eight - were 
				deliberately constructed to favor one party over another.
 Many Democrats had hoped that the newly drawn New York districts 
				would lead to the election of more members of their party in the 
				U.S. Congressional elections set for November, offsetting 
				anticipated losses in Texas and other states.
 
 Republicans are aiming to take control in November of the U.S. 
				House of Representatives, which is now only narrowly controlled 
				by Democrats.
 
 While drawing partisan district maps by both parties is a common 
				practice in the United States, giving enormous power to the 
				party that holds a state legislature, New York is one of several 
				states that has banned the practice in recent years.
 
 In their decision, a plurality of the judges of the Appellate 
				Division's Fourth Judicial Department said the maps were 
				unconstitutional because they were made in an essentially 
				one-party process and favored Democrats over Republicans.
 
 Democratic politicians including Governor Kathy Hochul are 
				expected to appeal the ruling to the state's highest court as 
				soon as next week, the New York Times reported Thursday.
 
 (Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; editing by Donna Bryson and 
				Leslie Adler)
 
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