Deinosuchus hatcheri is certainly scant, but we shouldn't be throwing out perfectly good holotypes because there are more complete specimens known. To that point, the type specimen of D. riograndensis, AMNH 3073, isn't that much more complete than CM 963, and critically it can't be differentiated from CM 963. There are much more complete specimens referred to D. riograndensis, but there's nothing that keeps them from being referred to D. hatcheri.
As far as whether or not D. hatcheri is diagnostic, Colbert and Bird (1954) don't list any features separating D. riograndensis from D. hatcheri and where there is overlapping material they note the two specimens are extremely similar. That's a problem for the validity of D. riograndensis, not D. hatcheri. This has been noticed by others. For example, Schwimmer (2002) considers Deinosuchus to be monotypic but he states that even if eastern and western Deinosuchus are separate species, "it is highly likely" that CM 963 and AMNH 3073 are the same species. Lucas et al. (2006) follows Schwimmer (2002) in recognizing only one species of Deinosuchus, but they also mention that there are no morphological differences between CM 963 and AMNH 3073. So the holotypes of D. hatcheri and D. riograndensis can't be differentiated, which seems more like a reason to consider D. riograndensis to be a junior synonym of D. hatcheri, not a reason to change the type species.
Cossette and Brochu (2020) don't argue D. hatcheri is not diagnostic (they state it is "clearly distinct" from the other species), and they actually unintentionally made a pretty solid argument for synonymizing lumping D. riograndensis into D. hatcheri. They point out that the pelvic and vertebrae features Holland used to diagnose D. hatcheri can be found in specimens referable to both D. riograndensis (from Texas) and D. schwimmeri (from the southeastern US), but they also noted that "massive, inflated osteoderms" are found in Deinosuchus specimens from "Texas and the Western Interior". So we have very similar osteoderms from D. riograndensis and other Laramidian specimens, but none from Appalachian Deinosuchus. Later in the same paper, the osteoderms of D. hatcheri are described as "very lumpy, bear deeply pitted surfaces, and have inflated keels". The osteoderms of D. riograndensis are described as "irregular, lumpy, and have inflated keels". They note the keels of D. riograndensis osteoderms aren't as inflated as those of CM 963, but CM 963 is also about 10-20% larger than any specimens of D. riograndensis with comparable osteoderms. When it comes to the osteoderms of D. schwimmeri they note "In opposition to this condition [referring to the descriptions above], the osteoderms of D. schwimmeri preserve inflated keels, but are often thinner and more regular in shape".
All of this to make the point that the osteoderms of Laramidian D. hatcheri and D. riograndensis are extremely similar, but those of the Appalachian D. schwimmeri are clearly different. This is also noted by Schwimmer (2010), where he argues for two species based on differences between the teeth and osteoderms. Massive, inflated osteoderms with deep pitting might feel like a thin character to base a synonymy on, but those same osteoderms are regularly considered one of the most distinctive features of the genus and we have a whole lot of them. Multiple specimens from Wyoming, Utah, and New Mexico are referred to Deinosuchus purely because of those osteoderms. If we keep D. hatcheri and D. riograndensis separate those specimens are in limbo as Deinosuchus sp. If there's only one Deinosuchus species in Laramidia (which most workers seem to consider to be the case), than D. hatcheri is the oldest name used for the taxon and is clearly diagnostic. It also ends up being pretty complete when all is said and done.
I'll wait for the paper to see what arguments get made, but the 2020 paper's arguments for change the type species were pretty thin.
References
Colbert, E.H., Bird, R.T. 1954. "A gigantic crocodile from the Upper Cretaceous beds of Texas" American Museum Novitates. 1688: 1–22.
Cossette A.P., Brochu C. 2020. "A systematic review of the giant alligatoroid Deinosuchus from the Campanian of North America and its implications for the relationships at the root of Crocodylia", Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2020.1767638
Lucas, S.G., Sullivan, R.M., Spielman, J.A. 2006. "The Giant Crocodylian Deinosuchus from the Upper Cretaceous of the San Juan Basin, New Mexico." Lucas, S.G., Sullivan, R.M. eds. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 35: 245-248
Schwimmer, D.R. 2002. King of the Crocodylians: The Paleobiology of Deinosuchus. Indiana University Press ISBN 978-0-253-34087-0.
Schwimmer, D.R. 2010. "One or two species of the giant crocodylian Deinosuchus". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30(Supplement 2): 1A–198A.