A split within the Brooklyn Democratic Party continues to widen as the county leader, Assembly member Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, is unsure if she will run again at the party’s next organizing meeting in September.

Reformers within the party want change and are pushing back against the chair’s leadership.

Years of infighting within the Brooklyn Democratic Party took a turn last month when reformers captured five district leader spots in the Democratic primary.

The new balance of power has forced Brooklyn Democratic Leader Bichotte Hermelyn to contemplate the party’s future and her own.

“If I were to run again, yes, I do feel strongly that I would get re-elected. And that’s a conversation. And we will certainly push to work with everybody,” Bichotte Hermelyn says.

Brooklyn, or Kings County, has the most registered Democratic voters of any county in the state — 1.2 million. But last year, Republicans made inroads, even winning a City Council seat in south Brooklyn.

Within the Democratic party, reformers are pitting themselves against the old guard. Council member Lincoln Restler started the reform-minded New Kings Democrats in 2008 to challenge party leadership.

“When I first ran for district leader, I think three out of the last four county bosses had been indicted on charges of corruption. And things have gotten no better in the ensuing decade,” Restler said.

In recent months, a number of intense intra-party squabbles have dominated headlines.

“A lot of this is the narrative that people choose to write about,” Bichotte Hermelyn sad. “And it definitely has been very biased. You look at the reporters who are writing a lot of these stories and it’s been very biased, certainly against a Black woman who has probably been the cleanest county leader who ever lived.”

Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso says the current leadership has failed to unify the party.

“When it comes to the leadership that currently exists, we’ve seen that they focus more on very local issues like who the poll workers are, getting fake signatures or getting signatures of people who passed away or signatures of folks that never knew they signed a document. And we want to change that,” Reynoso said.

In September, reformers may hold enough votes to finally control the powerful Brooklyn County Executive Committee, made up of Democratic district leaders — elected party officials who are unpaid, but hold a lot of clout within the party apparatus.

“I feel like now, unfortunately, you have strong, Brooklyn, Bronx and Queens Democratic machines that are still holding on to power,” Restler said. “What we are in the precipice of accomplishing in Brooklyn is new and different and bold.”

One the individuals to lose his district leader seat was Bichotte’s own husband, Edu Hermelyn. However, establishment Democrats pointed to other victories over progressives, including two in open Assembly seats and another incumbent fighting off a challenger.