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The Ad Campaign: Lhota Issues Warnings and Makes Promises

First aired: October 31, 2013
Produced by: Wilson Grand
for: Joseph J. Lhota

Joseph J. Lhota, the Republican nominee for mayor, released his latest television ad on Thursday. Titled “Promises,” it is airing on broadcast channels across New York City.

Fact-Check
0:06
“…but we are one bad mayor away from unsafe streets, failing schools, and fiscal chaos.”

Many who lived in New York City through the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s would probably agree that bad policies and unsteady leadership could result in rising crime rates and the deterioration of the city’s school system. With large deficits on the horizon and ballooning health care and pension costs, wise financial stewardship from City Hall in the coming years is also critical.

0:11
“I’ve been tested during difficult times, and I am ready to lead.”

Mr. Lhota has indeed been tested under the worst circumstances: Besides running the M.T.A. during Hurricane Sandy, he was Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani’s deputy mayor for operations on Sept. 11, 2001, when terrorists attacked the World Trade Center. He had planned meticulously for such a disaster, and his preparation and calm demeanor were seen as having been crucial to the administration’s deft response.

0:15
“This is my promise to you.”

As for his promises, doubling the number of charter schools would require legislation from Albany. Creating good-paying jobs is any mayor’s goal, but is easier promised than done. Much of the job growth in New York City in recent years has been in low-wage service jobs.

Scorecard

Mr. Lhota tries to meld warnings of what would befall New York if his Democratic opponent, Bill de Blasio, became mayor, with a positive message about what he himself would do in the job. His warnings may not resonate with voters who never experienced New York as a dangerous city on the brink of bankruptcy. And his effort to define himself may be too little, too late: Polls show that more voters have a negative view of Mr. Lhota than a positive one, and he is lagging behind Mr. de Blasio with just a few days remaining until the election Tuesday.


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Trick-or-Treating, Honestly

Dear Diary:

While nearing the end of my journey trick-or-treating last year in Forest Hills â€" I was then almost 11 â€" I came upon an unmanned house with a huge bowl of candy on the doorstep.

Picking up my jaw from the ground, I couldn’t believe my good luck. My shoulder devil immediately materialized with a poof and whispered quietly into my ear: “Take all of it! Nobody’s there … This much loot could last YEARS!”

As the possibilities of mouthwatering candy crept into my brain, I sprinted for the doorstep. Only as I came to a halt at the base of the worn brown stairs did I notice the security camera’s blinking red light and the small, handwritten sign above the candy that said “ONLY TAKE ONE, BECAUSE GOD WILL KNOW!”

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New York Today: Li’l Lhota vs. De Blasio Jr.

High schoolers impersonated the candidates at a pre-Halloween debate.Kirsten Luce for The New York Times High schoolers impersonated the candidates at a pre-Halloween debate.

We wanted to cover Halloween today. And mayoral politics.

Could we do both?

Yes. We just had to travel to Queens.

There, at Townsend Harris High School, seniors were costumed as politicians on Wednesday to enact a mayoral debate.

Joseph J. Lhota, played by a lanky Samuel Schrader, donned a striped red and blue tie.

Bill de Blasio, otherwise known as Jin Won Seo, was more relaxed.

He wore his older brother’s suit and black tennis shoes.

It was clear that both teenagers had done their homework.

“Income inequality should exist in any society that’s not Communist,” Samuel thundered in his role as Mr. Lhota.

Jin, playing Mr. de Blasio, responded, “I’m taxing those people who can still afford to eat caviar and shark fin for breakfast.”

The two debated the stop and frisk practice, the soda tax and other issues.

Afterwards, two girls in the stairwell declared faux Lhota the winner.

“The only voters de Blasio is going to get are the hardcore Democrats,” said Irene Joseph. “Or the undecided freshman.”

Then they admitted their bias: they were playing Mr. Lhota’s wife and his press secretary.

Here’s what else you need to know for Thursday.

WEATHER

Trick-or-treating tip: go early unless your costume’s waterproof.

Chance of rain is 30 percent at sunset, rising to 50 percent by 8 p.m.

If you plan to be out after midnight, staple an umbrella to your gorilla suit.

Quite warm in any case, with a high of 66.

COMMUTE

Subways: Click for latest status.

Rails: Click for L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect today but suspended tomorrow.

COMING UP TODAY

- The real Mr. de Blasio greets voters on a Bronx corner and marches in the Park Slope Halloween parade.

- Mr. Lhota is on “Good Day New York” at 7:15 a.m., greets trick-or-treaters on Staten Island and City Island in the Bronx, and hits two kosher supermarkets in Brooklyn.

- There are tons of Halloween festivities, but the biggest is the resurgent Greenwich Village parade, which steps off at 7 p.m. at Avenue of the Americas and Spring Street.

- Senior Halloween parade: at the Sirovich Center on East 12th Street. Indoors. 1:30 p.m. [Free]

- Gowanus dog parade: muster outside the Yuppie Puppy/Green Pup store at 544 Union Street in Brooklyn at 4:30 p.m. [Free, with prizes]

- Last day for people whose homes were damaged by Hurricane Sandy to register for the city aid program NYC Build it Back.

- A Halloween-themed light show on the Empire State Building. 8:30 p.m. [Free. Just look up.]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- The City Council raised the age for buying cigarettes to 21. [New York Times]

- At their final debate, the real Mr. de Blasio and Mr. Lhota mocked each other’s qualifications. [New York Times]

- Mr. Lhota is chipping away at Mr. de Blasio â€" but still trails by 39 points, a poll shows. [Politicker]

- Someone took a photo of a boy on a subway who resembles Avonte Oquendo, the missing autistic 14-year-old. [Daily News]

- In other subway photograph news: it’s the New York City Subway Operators’ Photography Club. [Atlantic Cities]

- Scoreboard: Knicks shoot down Bucks in Garden debut, 90-83. Nets fall to Cavs, 98-94.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

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