Jack de Vries

Jacob Gabe "Jack" de Vries (born 25 July 1968) is a retired Dutch politician of the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) party and political consultant.

Jack de Vries
Jack de Vries in 2009
State Secretary for Defence
In office
18 December 2007  18 May 2010
Prime MinisterJan Peter Balkenende
Preceded byCees van der Knaap
Succeeded byBarbara Visser (2017)
Personal details
Born
Jacob Gabe de Vries

(1968-07-25) 25 July 1968
Drachten, Netherlands
NationalityDutch
Political partyChristian Democratic Appeal
ResidenceLeiderdorp, Netherlands
Alma materRoyal Military Academy
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
(Bachelor of Social Science, Master of Social Science)
OccupationPolitician · Army Officer · Political consultant · Nonprofit director · Political pundit · Lobbyist
Military service
Allegiance Netherlands
Branch/serviceRoyal Netherlands Army
Years of service1993–1994 (Conscription)
1994–1996 (Active duty)
1996–1998 (Reserve)
Rank Lieutenant
UnitRegiment Huzaren Prins Alexander

Politics

De Vries studied at the VU University Amsterdam where he in 1992 obtained a MSc degree in political science. He was leader of the Christian Democratic youth movement (CDJA) and completed his military service with a stint as communications advisor to the Dutch Army. Never away from national politics, he became media spokesman of the CDA parliamentary faction in 1997, serving under Enneüs Heerma and Jaap de Hoop Scheffer. De Vries then became advisor to Jan Peter Balkenende who became political leader of the CDA in October 2001, after De Hoop Scheffer's lijsttrekker candidacy was not supported by the party. Balkenende won the 2002 elections, became Prime Minister, and brought de Vries with him to the Ministry of General Affairs.[1]

In 2005, De Vries was appointed as CDA campaign chairman, and lead them through the 2006 municipal elections, the 2006 general election, and the 2007 provincial elections.[2]

Resignation

He resigned on 14 May 2010 after admitting to an extra-marital affair with his personal aide a few days earlier. He announced his retirement from politics the same day.[3]

gollark: If we use all 16 options, we can move onto combination.
gollark: I have pink dye stored.
gollark: We should have different road colors for each street.
gollark: No, kiwis are infrared.
gollark: @Keanu7 Lime? Why?

References

Official
Political offices
Preceded by
Cees van der Knaap
State Secretary for Defence
2008–2010
Succeeded by
Barbara Visser
(2017)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.