You've pretty much answered your own question. It depends on how you deploy your website.
If the server is just going to pull directly from the Git repository:
1) It needs to have software installed to generate CSS from LESS.
2) or you need to include the CSS files in the repository.
If you're not pulling straight from the repository on your web server, you could have a build script that pulls from git, generates CSS, and then transfers the content to the web server(s), possibly excluding unnecessary files from the transfer.
In my opinion, Git should be used to keep all of the source for a project, and none of the "derived artifacts" (as mentioned by @thekbb). Developers need to have all tools installed to generate those derived artifacts during development and test. For deployment to test and production servers, an automated build server should take the source and create just the files needed for distribution.
In the case of software development, you'd have a Makefile with .C and .H files (for example) in your Git repository. Developers and the build server have a compiler installed that will create an executable or compiled library. When the files are packaged for distribution, the source code is not a part of the archive.
For web development, you have source files like original graphics, HTML templates and LESS files. Developers and the build server can run scripts to generate the site assets (CSS from LESS files, static HTML pages from templates, flattened images in multiple sizes/formats, etc.) When the build server deploys new builds, it copies just the files needed by the server, excluding the source graphics, templates and LESS files.
If there are people that need to review the site content, they should do it on a staging server. If that's not possible, the automated build server can create a ZIP file on an internal server that they can download for review.