Kathy Hochul

Politician

Birthday August 27, 1958

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Buffalo, New York, U.S.

Age 65 years old

Nationality United States

#3891 Most Popular

1920

A member of the Democratic Party, she is New York's first female governor and the first governor from Upstate New York since Nathan L. Miller in 1920.

1926

Hochul's residence in Hamburg, just outside the 26th district, became an issue during her campaign, though it did not disqualify her from seeking the seat.

1958

Kathleen Hochul (née Courtney; born August 27, 1958) is an American politician and lawyer.

Since August 24, 2021, she has served as the 57th governor of New York.

1979

In the spring of 1979, the student newspaper The Daily Orange awarded her an "A", citing the campus changes as evidence for the grade.

1980

Born in Buffalo, New York, the second of six children in a family of Irish Catholic descent, Hochul graduated from Syracuse University in 1980 and received a Juris Doctor from the Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law in Washington, D.C. in 1984.

She received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in political science from the Maxwell School of Syracuse University in 1980 and a Juris Doctor from the Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law in Washington, D.C., in 1984.

After graduation from law school, Hochul began working for a Washington, D.C., law firm, but she found the work unsatisfying.

She then worked as legal counsel and legislative assistant to U.S. Representative John LaFalce and U.S. Senator Daniel Moynihan, and also for the New York State Assembly, before seeking elected office.

Hochul became involved in local issues as a supporter of small businesses facing competition from Walmart stores and, in the process, caught the attention of local Democratic leaders.

1994

On January 3, 1994, the Hamburg Town Board voted to appoint her to the vacant seat on the board caused by Patrick H. Hoak's resignation to become town supervisor.

She was elected to a full term in November 1994, on the Democratic and Conservative lines, and was reelected in 1998, 2002, and 2006.

2003

In May 2003, Erie County Clerk David Swarts appointed Hochul as his deputy.

2007

After serving on the Hamburg town board and as deputy Erie County clerk, Hochul was appointed Erie County clerk in 2007.

She was elected to a full term as Erie County clerk in 2007 and reelected in 2010.

She resigned on April 10, 2007, and was succeeded by former state assemblymember Richard A. Smith.

While on the board, she led efforts to remove toll booths on parts of the New York State Thruway system.

Governor Eliot Spitzer named Swarts to his administration in January 2007 and appointed Hochul to succeed Swarts as county clerk in April 2007.

In an intervention that raised her statewide profile, she opposed Spitzer's proposal to allow undocumented immigrants to apply for a driver's license without producing a social security card, and said that if the proposal went into effect she would seek to have any such applicants arrested.

She was elected later in 2007 to fill the remainder of Swarts's term.

2010

She ran for reelection on four ballot lines: Democratic, Conservative, Independence and Working Families Party, defeating Republican Clifton Bergfeld in November 2010 with 80 percent of the vote.

Following Hochul's departure as county clerk, a backlog of mail was discovered by newly elected County Clerk Chris Jacobs, who later said that $792,571 in checks were found in the backlogged mail.

As county clerk, Hochul had been in the process of implementing a new system for handling real estate documents when she left after being elected to Congress.

Jacobs said that $9,000 were spent in overtime to deposit checks and file unopened documents that had accumulated in the interim period after Hochul's departure, while the office was adjusting to the new system.

2011

In May 2011, Hochul won a four-candidate special election for New York's 26th congressional district to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of then-Representative Chris Lee, becoming the first Democrat to represent the district in 40 years.

She served as a U.S. representative from 2011 to 2013.

Hochul ran in the May 24, 2011, special election to fill the seat in New York's 26th congressional district left vacant by the resignation of Chris Lee.

She was the Democratic Party and Working Families Party nominee.

2012

Hochul was defeated for reelection in 2012 by Chris Collins after the district's boundaries and demographics were changed in the decennial reapportionment process.

Hochul later worked as a government relations executive for the Buffalo-based M&T Bank.

2014

In the 2014 New York gubernatorial election, Andrew Cuomo selected Hochul as his running mate; after they won the election, Hochul was inaugurated as lieutenant governor.

2018

Cuomo and Hochul were reelected in 2018.

Hochul took office as governor of New York on August 24, 2021, after Cuomo resigned amid allegations of sexual harassment.

She won a full term in the 2022 election against Republican U.S. Representative Lee Zeldin in the narrowest New York gubernatorial election since 1994.

Hochul was born Kathleen Courtney in Buffalo, New York, the second of the six children of John P. "Jack" Courtney, then a college student and clerical worker, and Patricia Ann "Pat" (Rochford) Courtney, a homemaker.

The family struggled financially during Hochul's early years and for a time lived in a trailer near a steel plant.

By the time Hochul was in college, however, her father was working for the information technology company he later headed.

Her family is of Irish Catholic descent.

Hochul became politically active during her college years at Syracuse University, leading a boycott of the student bookstore over high prices and an unsuccessful effort to name the university stadium after alumnus Ernie Davis, a star running back who died of cancer before he could join the National Football League.

Hochul successfully lobbied the university to divest from apartheid South Africa.