After New York’s highest court struck down the state’s newly redistricted congressional map, the Hudson Valley congressman leading efforts to preserve the Democrats’ majority in the U.S. House said they “don’t know” what the impact will be on this year’s midterm elections.

“We would have to see the new districts, so there’s no way to tell,” Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney told NY1 in an interview Wednesday, just hours after the New York Court of Appeals issued its ruling.

Maloney chairs the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee — the House Democrats’ campaign arm.

Under the maps approved by state lawmakers before being struck down Wednesday, Democrats stood to pick up a handful of congressional seats in New York, critical in a midterm year when the party is facing stiff headwinds nationally.

Now, a court-appointed special master will be brought in to help redraft the lines, taking the task away from the Democratic-controlled state legislature.

Maloney criticized the decision to bring in the special master, saying, “We shouldn’t have a single individual that’s been unelected supplant his will for the will of the elected representatives of the state.”

Still, Maloney argued regardless of what happens in New York, Democrats nationally will still have a “have a much better map than the one anyone predicted a year ago” when redistricting kicked off nationwide after the 2020 census.

For New Yorkers running for Congress, the court’s ruling means they are now left waiting to see what their district will in fact look like. Depending on how the lines change, they may need to introduce themselves to whole new neighborhoods and communities.

The court’s decision also potentially delays the congressional primary, originally scheduled for the end of June, until August.

Asked about the ruling, Congressman Jamaal Bowman, a Democrat representing The Bronx and Westchester County, said “it is what it is.”

“Who knows where the maps are going to land. I’m going to continue to do my job,” he said. “You’ve got to control what you can control today. As long as we do our job effectively as Democrats, we should be okay.”

Republicans within the New York delegation cheered the court’s decision.

Rep. Tom Reed, who is not seeking re-election at the end of this term, said, “When the Democrats overreached, I’m glad to see at least the courts stepped in and said, ‘No, we’re going to stand up for the people.’”

Staten Island Rep. Nicole Malliotkais, who faced a potentially more difficult re-election bid under the now-knocked down map, tweeted, “The will of the people prevailed over the Corrupt Albany Machine in a tremendous victory for democracy, fair elections & the Constitution!”