Chris Masingill

Chris Masingill is an American official who served as the 2nd Federal Co-Chair of the Delta Regional Authority.

Chris Masingill
2nd Federal Co-Chairman of the
Delta Regional Authority
In office
June 24, 2010  July 28, 2017
Preceded byPete Johnson
Succeeded byChristopher Caldwell
Personal details
Born1973 (age 4647)
Texas
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materTexas Wesleyan University (B.S.)

Early life and career

Chris Masingill was born 1973 in Texas. His family later moved to Morrilton, Arkansas. He returned to Texas to attend Texas Wesleyan University where he became involved in politics. In 1998, he worked for the campaign of Blanche Lincoln, joining her staff after she won the election. Shortly after, he worked on the campaign of Mike Ross. Afterwards, he served as Ross's district director for four years. In 2006, served as the campaign manager for Mike Beebe's successful gubernatorial campaign. He then worked for the Beebe administration, which included implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.[1]

In 2008, Masingill attended the Democratic National Convention as a delegate for the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton.[1]

Delta Regional Authority

In 2010, Barack Obama appointed Masingill to be the 2nd Federal Co-Chairman of the Delta Regional Authority. Masingill came out against a Trump Administration budget proposal which would abolish the DRA.[2] In July 2017, President Donald Trump fired Masingill from his role.[3] On September 12, 2017, Trump nominated Christopher Caldwell, a staffer to Senator John Boozman.[4] Caldwell was later confirmed by the United States Senate and took office January 12, 2018.

Post-federal service

On May 22, 2018, it was reported that Masingill had been appointed to lead the economic development efforts of the St. Tammany Development District, a state created entity centered on St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana in the New Orleans metropolitan area.[5]

gollark: It's not very lasseiz-faire to have local government-enforced monopolies.
gollark: Or A&A, or something like that.
gollark: AA ISP here, except their prices are kind of bad.
gollark: There's also fairly consistent mobile network coverage on a bunch of networks, but it is *also* somewhat slow and has data caps.
gollark: Or Openreach or something? In any case, prices are okay and you can choose from a bunch of providers, but they all use the same bad infrastructure.

References

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