Greenhalgh began his political career in the local politics of the
London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, first standing for election in 1994 in
Sands End, a relatively poor
ward within
Fulham. He was unsuccessful. In a by-election in 1996, he was elected to the
Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council in the
Town ward, at a time when the Conservatives were in opposition on the Council. Two years later, he became the Conservative spokesman on
social services. Then, in 1999, he became the deputy leader of the Conservative group, and in 2003 the group leader. In 2008, Greenhalgh was appointed by
Eric Pickles, the then
Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, to head the new Conservative Councils Innovation Unit to formulate new
local-government policy, and he was also appointed by the new
Mayor of London,
Boris Johnson, to oversee a financial audit of the
Greater London Authority. During his time on the Council, Greenhalgh became famous for being a cost-cutter, for which he has received both praise and criticism. Greenhalgh was appointed, by Boris Johnson, to head the MOPAC, as the second Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime. To take up this position, Greenhalgh resigned from his roles as Council leader and Councillor and was succeeded as leader by
Nick Botterill. Although Greenhalgh was no longer an elected official, the Mayor was permitted to appoint him by sections 19 and 20 of the act. However, the water cannon bought by Boris Johnson for £322k were sold for scrap for just £11k having never been used after the Conservative Home Secretary,
Theresa May, banned the police from using them. In December 2014, Greenhalgh became the third declared candidate for the Conservative Party nomination in the
2016 London mayoral election. On 18 March 2020
Boris Johnson appointed him as an unpaid joint
Minister of State at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government and the Home Office.
House of Lords On 16 April 2020 he was created
Baron Greenhalgh, of
Fulham in the
London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. == Controversy ==