Giuliani administration In 1994, Lhota joined the administration of Mayor
Rudy Giuliani, where he held several positions over Giuliani's two terms. He first served as chief of staff to the deputy mayor for finance and economic development and that year was quickly promoted to New York City finance commissioner. In 1995, he was selected as director of the
New York City Mayor's Office of Management and Budget. In 1998, Giuliani appointed Lhota to deputy mayor for operations. As the head of the mayor's rat abatement task force, he was humorously known as "
the Rat Czar". Lhota served as Mayor Giuliani's liaison to the
White House,
United States Congress,
governor of New York,
New York State Legislature and
New York City Council. Additionally, he was responsible for oversight of the city's relationships with the public employee unions and development of collective bargaining agreement strategies.
Chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority On October 20, 2011,
New York State Governor
Andrew Cuomo nominated Lhota to serve as chairman of the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the largest mass transit provider in the United States (servicing 8.5 million customers daily). While awaiting confirmation by the
New York State Senate, Lhota began serving as interim CEO. He was unanimously confirmed on January 9, 2012. with
Governor Cuomo and federal, state and city officials. Lhota was responsible for
New York City Transit’s Fastrack program, which saw more than $16 million in productivity gains in 2012, by concentrating and targeting subway station maintenance efforts. In July 2012, Lhota announced a $30 million service enhancement package that restored transportation services that the MTA had previously eliminated in 2010, and added new transit services in underserved areas, including
Williamsburg, the
South Bronx and
Brooklyn Navy Yard—all New York City neighborhoods that had seen significant residential and commercial development since 2005. Lhota headed efforts to make information about the MTA and its services more accessible to its customers through its website and apps. He granted pay raises to managers at the MTA. When
Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the New York metropolitan area in October 2012, Lhota shut down the MTA in advance of the storm and moved the system's trains to high ground to avoid damage from the storm surge. His other notable hurricane recovery measure was the rapid deployment of a free
Rockaway Park Shuttle to service the worst damaged line in
Rockaway, Queens. Lhota also directed the MTA to provide regular details and updates to the public on the recovery efforts via social media and local news channels. On January 17, 2013, he filed paperwork with the
New York City Board of Elections and the
New York State Board of Elections to formally launch his mayoral campaign. In August 2013, after an MTA subway line was temporarily stopped to rescue two kittens on the tracks in Brooklyn, Lhota's campaign spokesperson told media outlets that while it was the MTA's decision, he would not have shut down the lines. The
New York Daily News then featured him on their front page under the headline: "Die, Kitties, Die," while Republican primary opponent John Catsimatidis criticized him in a
New York Post article titled "Cats loves cats... and Lhota doesn't." Some candidates in the Democratic primary said they would have stopped the trains, with
Anthony Weiner's spokesperson saying "If Anthony is elected mayor, he will not only stop trains for kittens, he will personally crawl over the third rail to do it." Lhota won the endorsements of all three major daily New York City newspapers for the Republican primary, with
The New York Times stating, "few people know better than Mr. Lhota how city government works." He won the primary on September 10, 2013, with 52.5% of the vote, defeating
John Catsimatidis, who garnered 40.7%, and George T. McDonald, who captured 6.8%. In the general election campaign, Lhota received the endorsements of Crain's New York Business,
AM New York, Newsday, and The
Jewish Voice. Lhota's economic plan focused on job creation primarily through municipal tax cuts. He said he wanted to lower the General Corporation Tax, phase out the Commercial Rent Tax, reform the Unincorporated Business Tax, and lower the hotel tax. Lhota also proposed a tax incentive program to allow private sector developers to build
mixed-use housing to incorporate affordable units. He planned to improve education in New York City by doubling the number of public
charter schools, particularly in low-income neighborhoods. He participated in a
School Choice Rally organized by
Success Academy Charter Schools to protest Democratic candidate
Bill de Blasio's proposed rent requirement for the city's charter schools that were operating in public school buildings and ban on further co-location in public school buildings. He also proposed universal pre-kindergarten without raising taxes. Lhota lost the general election to de Blasio, garnering 249,121 votes, or 24.3% of the voter turnout.
Return to MTA In January 2017, Governor Cuomo appointed Lhota to the committee charged with conducting a nationwide search for a new chair and chief executive officer of the MTA. In June 2017, Lhota was nominated by Cuomo to return to Chairman of the MTA. track fires, and overcrowding incidents. Cuomo ordered Lhota to come up with a reorganization plan for the subway within 30 days. Lhota's plan involved removing seats from subway cars, consolidating the subway's scattered operations, managing escalators and elevators, and repairing damaged and critically important signals and tracks. The MTA had been criticized for implementing relatively cosmetic improvements, rather than performing needed repairs and upgrades to signals, power, tracks, station accessibility, and infrastructure. In response, Lhota said that the MTA was improving passenger experience not only on the trains, but also in the stations. On November 9, 2018, Lhota resigned his position as chairman of the MTA, effective immediately, without having taken his $1-a-year salary. A
Wall Street Journal article in October 2018 had speculated that Lhota was considering retiring because of potential conflicts of interest with his other roles as NYU Langone Health chief of staff, and as a lobbyist, though Lhota repudiated these claims. In July 2019, it was revealed that Lhota did resign in a letter to Cuomo due to a state ethics committee decision that he had too strong a potential conflict of interest. ==Personal life==