On August 31, 1950, O'Dwyer, pursued by both federal and state investigators, was suddenly appointed by President
Harry S. Truman as
United States ambassador to Mexico, where he would be beyond the reach of officials who wanted his public testimony in several matters on which he preferred not to speak. Under the City Charter of the era, City Council President Impellitteri became acting mayor upon O'Dwyer's resignation. The
Tammany Hall bosses determined that Impellitteri was unsuitable for the role and refused to nominate him as the Democratic candidate for the
special election in November 1950; instead, highly regarded
New York State Supreme Court Judge
Ferdinand Pecora, who was also given the
Liberal Party line, ran as the nominee. Impellitteri ignored the machine and ran independently under the new "Experience Party" banner. He also popularized the slogan "unbought and unbossed" during his 1950 campaign. Impellitteri was the first mayor since the consolidation of greater New York in 1898 who was elected without a major party's ballot line, and his election was a populist uprising against the political system. The results were: • Vincent Impellitteri (Experience Party) 1,161,175 votes •
Ferdinand Pecora (Democratic/Liberal) 935,351 • Edward Corsi (Republican) 382,372 • Paul L. Ross (American Labor) 147,578 Impellitteri's inauguration, held on November 14, 1950, absent either a band or a platform, was swift and straightforward. Outside City Hall, he pledged to "do my level best to justify the confidence you have reposed in me." Shortly after Impellitteri's succession, the
Kings County District Attorney arrested bookmaker Harry Gross in September 1950 as part of a corruption investigation that caused nearly 500 police officers of all ranks to resign, retire, or be fired. Impellitteri opposed the corruption, vigorously supporting the Brooklyn District Attorney, Miles McDonald, and firing anyone in his administration associated with former Mayor
William O'Dwyer. ,
Israel, 1952 Impellitteri is credited with trying to rein in the budget, raising the bus and subway fare to fifteen cents, establishing parking meters on city streets for enhanced revenue, and increasing the sales tax. He aspired to be a new light in city politics, but his administration met with some resistance from the established order. At the time,
Robert Moses wielded significant influence; according to
Robert Caro (in his Moses biography
The Power Broker), Impellitteri deferred to Moses on all matters of appointments and policy and is described as a puppet on Robert Moses' strings. Impellitteri ran for a full term in 1953. He was defeated in the Democratic primary by then
Manhattan Borough President Robert F. Wagner, Jr. Although
New York City Comptroller Lazarus Joseph usually sided in the
New York City Board of Estimate with Impellitteri during the latter's term in office, Joseph supported Wagner for the Democratic nomination. ==Later career and retirement==