Chris Hunsinger

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The Honorable

Chris Hunsinger

MP
CHprofile1.jpg
Shadow Minister of Transport in the National Assembly of South Africa
Incumbent
Assumed office
6 June 2019
Preceded byManuel De Freitas[1]
Deputy Shadow Minister of Transport
In office
May 2014 – May 2019
Personal details
Born (1962-10-23) 23 October 1962 (age 58)
Bloemfontein, South Africa
Political partyDemocratic Alliance
ResidenceMalmesbury, Western Cape, South Africa
Alma materUniversity of Stellenbosch
OccupationPolitician

Chris Hunsinger (born 23 October 1962) is a South African politician,[2] a Member of the South African Parliament[3] since 2014, Caucus Whip[4] and Treasurer[5] with the Democratic Alliance (South Africa).[6] He was appointed by the then Leader of the Opposition Mmusi Maimane on 5 June 2019 and retained by the current Leader of the Opposition John Steenhuisen in October 2019[7] and again in December 2020,[8] as The Shadow Minister of Transport. Hunsinger was re-elected to Parliament on 6 June 2019. He speaks and writes about issues related to consumer and commodity needs in transport, including safety,[9] planning, finance and management with South African road,[10] rail,[11] maritime,[12] and aviation service providers.[13]

Major achievement[]

Hunsinger earned recognition[14] for his key role in the dramatic consolidation of all opposition parties in the last sessions of Parliament in Dec 2018 during consideration of the 'RABS Bill'. Referred to as; "...a stunning turnaround" (Times Live)[15] this speech [16]in the National Assembly of Parliament in RSA[17] highlighted the deficiencies of the Road Accident Benefit Scheme Bill, 2017 & presented a strong case of irrational design & manipulated process in the 2nd Reading Debate on 4 December 2018, whereas RABS intended to replace the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996. With all other opposition parties following the paragon, the approval did not succeed on the day & was finally defeated a second time on 6 December 2018 & a further attempt (5 December 2018) was successfully stemmed via crafty application of NA Rules.[18] Despite amendments to the Bill tabled by Hunsinger being ‘negatived’ at the sitting,[19] all opposition parties walked out – rendering the House inquorate & unable to vote on its second reading & the Bill lapsed as a result.[20] In the early stages of being reintroduced during the 6th Parliament "Hunsinger convinced the Committee"[21] not to proceed with the RABS Bill. A rare achievement, which was ratified by Parliament on 3 September 2020.[22]

The Bergrivier Local Government have achieved five consecutive clean audit outcomes since Hunsinger's appointment as constituency head in February 2017 and in 2019 the municipality was placed 8th in South Africa, 3rd in Western Cape Province, and 2nd in the Western Region[23] in the Good Governance Africa Performance Index conducted amongst 213 municipalities, using data on 15 indicators across three themes: administration, economic development & service delivery.

Life[]

Member of the National Assembly Portfolio Committee on Transport[24] covering:

  • Road:(including Road Accident Fund, Road Traffic Management Corporation,[25] Cross-Border Road Transport Agency,[26] Road Traffic Infringements Agency[27])
  • Rail:(including Railway Safety Regulator, Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa)
  • Maritime:(including South African Maritime Safety Authority, Ports Regulator of South Africa[28])
  • Aviation:(including South African Civil Aviation Authority, Airports Company South Africa, Air Traffic Navigation Services,[29])

Hunsinger was an entrepreneur in the retail and financial services industry. He was nominated as SA Best Practice Top 10 Finalist in 2009 and won the Celestis Best Practice Award of the Western Cape Province in the same year[30]

As a public figure, Hunsinger takes time in sharing his activities with 7 000 Facebook & Twitter followers & also manages his own blog: Chris Hunsinger.co.za Home with 50 740 hits & 34 articles (June 2020) while maintaining an average attendance rate of over 90%[31] in formal Parliamentary engagements & sessions.

He holds a Master Degree in Public Administration (MPA) with MANCOSA[32] & is a certificated HTML coder[33] & practitioner.

Politics[]

Before being promoted to Parliament, Hunsinger was a Councillor in the Swartland Local Municipality. He was MMC responsible for Finance & Economic Development when the council received three consecutive "clean" audit outcomes. In 2011/12, 2012/13, 2013/14, one of only two municipalities out of 256 in SA to have accomplished this standard and improved its standing. Also, improving on the independent Local Economic Development Maturity Assessment from 14th position in 2011 to 1st in 2014 out of 30 municipalities in the Western Cape.

He led the Swartland bid team in 2013 that won international finance for the first VPUU and RSEP (Violence Prevention through Urban Upliftment and Regional Socio-Economic) projects in South Africa for rural areas. The unique proposal was recognized as a leading bid in terms of concept, innovative content, and standard of submission. He also served as Provincial Executive Council member for the Western Cape in South African Local Government Association and as provincial chairman of three working groups on the provincial and national level: Municipal Infrastructure & Planning, Municipal Trade & Services, and Climate Change & Environmental Planning. As Political Leader in the Democratic Alliance, Hunsinger has served as a Federal, Provincial, and Regional Council member. As Western Region Campaign Manager in the 2014 national elections, involving 10 Municipal Constituencies, the Democratic Alliance improved with 23% support compared to the previous National election in 2009 and the Swartland Constituency – the 65% DA support of the 2011 local government elections was increased to 67% – retaining the reputation as a top-performing constituency in South Africa in local, provincial and national election outcomes. In the 2016 Local Government Elections, he was responsible for target tracking in the Western Region, which saw an increase of 19% over the 2011 election results. As a ward councilor in Swartland Local Municipality, Hunsinger improved support for the Democratic Alliance in ward 10 from 68% in 2006 to 93% in 2014 with a 73% voter participation. While serving as Constituency Head for Matzikama, the Democratic Alliance won 7 out of the 8 wards in the 2016 LGE. Before this, he also served as Constituency Head for Phillipi during which time profitable gains were recorded in support for the DA. Since February 2017, he serves as Political Leader and Constituency Head for Bergrivier, one of the only local government regions under DA governance, in full control of all wards of the Constituency since January 2019.[34]

Civic contribution[]

In 2006, Hunsinger was honored with the International Blue Heart Award in Berlin, Germany, for his contribution towards promoting various international youth partnerships between South Africa and Germany since 1997 – and in particular for the establishment of the annual International Sondeza Youth Camp[35] in Ganzekraal, South Africa,[36] in 2004. He was the 14th international and first African recipient of this prestigious prize and remains personally involved in volunteer projects and programs, which kicked off in 2005. Teenagers from the mainly rural Western Region of Western Cape have participated annually among 20 invited countries in leadership development programs at the Eurocamp in Kiez-Harz,[37] Güntersberge, Germany, Belgium, and South Africa since 1999, benefitting more than a thousand teenagers. In 2016, Hunsinger received honorary life membership of USAPHO,[38] a registered non-profit community organization, served as Executive Board member of The Character Company,[39] and Governance Director of SASH – The SA Society of Hope[40]

Offices held[]

Political offices
Preceded by
Gregory Krumbock
South African Shadow Deputy Minister of Transport
2014–2019
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Manuel de Freitas
South African Shadow Minister of Transport
2019–current
Succeeded by
incumbent

References[]

  1. ^ "Manuel Simão Franca De Freitas". People's Assembly.
  2. ^ "People's Assembly". www.pa.org.za.
  3. ^ "National Assembly". People's Assembly.
  4. ^ "People's Assembly". www.pa.org.za.
  5. ^ Gerber, Jan. "DA elects new caucus leadership, Mike Waters won't return as deputy chief whip". News24.
  6. ^ "RAF 'double dealing' claimants - The struggling Road Accident Fund stands accused of fraud.". Times Live. Bianca Capazorio | 22 April 2015
  7. ^ Gerber, Jan (5 June 2019). "Here's the DA's 'shadow cabinet'". News24. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  8. ^ "DA announces new Shadow Cabinet that will bring Real Hope and Real Change".
  9. ^ "TimesLIVE". www.timeslive.co.za. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  10. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  11. ^ [2][dead link]
  12. ^ "Sea Tragedy: DA Requests Urgent Audit Of Rescue Vessels | DispatchLIVE".
  13. ^ "SALGA - Page Manager Pages" Archived 19 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. ^ "Aprav.live". www.facebook.com.
  15. ^ live.co.za/politics/2018-12-05-decision-on-replacing-road-accident-fund-postponed-to-2019/ "Decision on replacing Road Accident Fund postponed to 2019" Check |url= value (help). TimesLIVE.
  16. ^ https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=rabs+chris+hunsinger
  17. ^ "RABS: "Turnaround Speech"". 7 June 2019.
  18. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7RaKuLJLBI "RABS Turnaround"
  19. ^ "MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS" (PDF). www.parliament.gov.za. 6 December 2018. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  20. ^ "Legislation: Road Accident Benefit Scheme Bill 'revived'". 20 February 2019.
  21. ^ https://www.moneyweb.co.za/news/south-africa/parliament-bins-road-accident-benefit-scheme/
  22. ^ https://www.da.org.za/2020/09/unanimous-decision-not-to-proceed-with-the-rabs-bill-a-victory-for-all-south-africans
  23. ^ "Good Governance Africa 2019 – Government Performance Index". m.polity.org.za.
  24. ^ "Portfolio Committee On Transport". People's Assembly.
  25. ^ . 30 June 2020 – via Wikipedia.
  26. ^ "C-BRTA". www.cbrta.co.za.
  27. ^ "RTIA - Home". www.rtia.co.za.
  28. ^ "Ports Regulator of South Africa". Ports Regulator of South Africa.
  29. ^ "ATNS - Air Traffic Navigation Services". www.atns.co.za.
  30. ^ "Recognising excellence in the financial advisor space". www.fanews.co.za.
  31. ^ "Chris Hunsinger". People's Assembly.
  32. ^ https://www.mancosa.co.za/programme/master-of-public-administration/. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  33. ^ https://certificate.bcdiploma.com/check/1325970B99B6EFB41C62903761ECD6A660BD9C759806E82C3D5C3AE0F1FC9AB3K2JuajAzTWlaNmFFNnQ5K1pUMi9rQ3hlQjd6aHFvWkVnUmpDbVZpT2VhQTFhSVNm. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  34. ^ Gerber, Jan. "DA bags 2 wards in Cape by-elections, but support drops in Bonteheuwel". News24.
  35. ^ "Annual Swartland youth camp at ganzekraal". Netwerk24. 3 December 2019.
  36. ^ "Sondeza Afri-Youth Camp, Ganzekraal, South Africa 2016 - Malmesbury School". www.malmesbury.wilts.sch.uk.
  37. ^ "KJH "Harz-Park" Güntersberge". harz-park.de.
  38. ^ "Welcome to Usapho Foundation | Creating a Strong Nation by Building Better Families".
  39. ^ "HOME". thecharactercompany.
  40. ^ "SA Society of Hope". www.facebook.com.

External links[]

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