Thomas Walters obtained a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University of Stellenbosch. He also completed the Management Advancement Programme at the Wits Business School. He later attained a Masters of Business Administration from the Gordon Institute of Business Science and the University of Pretoria's Business School.[2]
Political career
Walters was a student leader of the now-defunct Democratic Party. He had also served as the Democratic Alliance's Federal Youth Chairperson. He was later elected to the Johannesburg City Council as a DA councillor.
Walters was elected to the Gauteng Provincial Legislature in April 2009. He was appointed the party's Provincial Spokesperson on Agriculture and Rural Development. In November 2009, he was elected Provincial Chairperson of the Democratic Alliance in Gauteng. Walters stood down as Provincial Chairperson in March 2012, and Mike Moriarty was elected to succeed him.[3][4]
During the 2014 general election that was held on 7 May, Walters was elected to the National Assembly of South Africa. He was sworn in as an MP on 21 May 2014. In June 2014, the Parliamentary Leader of the Democratic Alliance, Mmusi Maimane, appointed Walters as Shadow Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform. Walters was later demoted to Shadow Deputy Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform.
In 2015, he was re-elected as deputy chairperson of the DA's Federal Council. He won another term at the party's 2018 Federal Congress.[8] Also, at the 2018 Federal Congress, DA delegates voted to add another deputy chairperson to the Federal Council and Natasha Mazzone was elected to fill the position.[9] Walters left the Shadow Cabinet in June 2019.[10][11]
He was re-elected as a deputy chairperson of the DA Federal Council at the party's elective congress in October 2020. He now served alongside James Masango and Ashor Sarupen (later elected in a special election). Helen Zille remained the chairperson of the federal council.[14]
Walters gained re-election to another term as deputy federal chairperson of the DA Federal Council in 2023.[15]
^Nkosi, Nomazima; Capa, Siyamtanba; De Kock, Rochelle; Kimberley, Michael (19 October 2019). "Battle for top DA job". HeraldLIVE. Retrieved 20 October 2019.