Chris Hollins | |
|---|---|
| City Controller of Houston | |
| Assumed office January 2024 | |
| County Clerk of Harris County | |
Acting | |
| In office June 1,2020 –November 17,2020 | |
| Preceded by | Diane Trautman |
| Succeeded by | Teneshia Hudspeth |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Christopher George Hollins July 8,1986 |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Education | Morehouse College (BA) Yale University (JD) Harvard University (MBA) |
Christopher George Hollins (born July 8,1986) is an American attorney and Democratic politician who is the City Controller of Houston. He previously served as interim Harris County Clerk from June 2020 to November 2020. He is known for overseeing the 2020 United States presidential election in Harris County;many of his policies received resistance from state Republican officials. [1]
In February 2022,he announced a candidacy in the 2023 Houston mayoral election but withdrew in April 2023 to run for city controller. On December 9,2023,Hollins was elected to be the city controller of Houston.
Christopher George Hollins [2] was born on July 8,1986 [a] and is a 4th-generation Houstonian. His father worked 34 years for the Houston Police Department. [5] [6] In addition to Hollins and his two sisters,his mother raised more than 25 foster children. Growing up in Missouri City,Texas,he graduated from Hightower High School. [5] Hollins then attended Morehouse College where he received a Bachelor of Arts in political science. [7] Following graduation,Hollins went on to earn a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and a Master of Business Administration from Harvard Business School. [8]
Hollins is an attorney. [9] Prior to his political career,was a management consultant with McKinsey &Company. [10]
On May 16,2020,the Commissioners Court for Harris County voted to appoint Hollins as Interim Clerk for Harris County,Texas by a 3–2,party-line vote after his predecessor,Diane Trautman,resigned from the position citing ill health. [11] At 33 years old, [12] Hollins was the youngest person to have ever held the position,as well as the first African American. [13] [14] He took office on June 1,2020. [15] [16]
The Office of the Harris County Clerk is not only responsible for administering permits and other licenses or incorporation documents,but also responsible for managing all election responsibilities as the Harris County Elections Administrator. [17] Hollins submitted a plan to separate the responsibilities of overseeing the election from the Office of the Harris County Clerk into a new,separate appointed position:Harris County Elections Administrator.[ citation needed ] His efforts resulted in Isabel Longoria,a community organizer and special adviser to Hollins,being sworn in to the office via virtual ceremony on November 18,2020. [18] Longoria was the first to hold the position. [18]
Hollins tenure as clerk ended on November 17,2020,and he was succeeded by newly elected Teneshia Hudspeth. [19] Both during and following his tenure as Clerk,Hollins made both national and local news appearances,including but not limited to KTRK-TV (ABC); [20] [21] [22] Ayman; [23] and Zerlina. [24]
Hollins was vocal in opposing Texas governor Greg Abbott's decision to allow only one drop-box per Texas county in the 2020 presidential election. [25]
Hollins sought to send out applications for postal (mail-in) ballots for the general election to each registered voter to Harris County. However, this plan was challenged by Republican officials, and was blocked by the Supreme Court of Texas in October 2020. [26] [27] Other policies instituted by Hollins include expansion of in-person voting locations, the introduction of drive-through voting, developing COVID-19 safety guidelines regarding voting, extending voting hours to include 24-hour voting. [28] [29] [30] [31]
On November 1, 2020, days before election day, the Supreme Court of Texas threw out a Republican challenge seeking to invalidate about 127,000 votes cast via the drive-through voting program Hollins implemented. [32] Two days later, a federal judge upheld the legitimacy of drive-through votes, rejecting a similar Republican effort to invalidate votes cast through this method. [33]
On September 7, 2021, Governor Abbott responded to the voting modifications Hollins put in place during his tenure as Clerk by signing a voting bill that tightened state election laws by limiting the ability to expand voting options at the county level. [34] The voting bill was scheduled to take effect just in time for the 2022 primary elections, but has since been stuck in federal court. [35]
In November 2020, Hollins appeared on various national and local news programs to discuss the Harris County elections, including MSNBC. [36] [37] [38] [39]
In February 2022, Hollins announced his candidacy in the 2023 Houston mayoral election to succeed Sylvester Turner, who's term-limited. [40] In the first five months of his candidacy, Hollins raised $1.1 million. [41] On April 6, 2023, Hollins withdrew from the mayoral race to instead run for city controller. He indicated that the entrance of Sheila Jackson Lee to the race influenced his decision to drop out. Hollins did not make an endorsement for any of the remaining candidates, but expressed admiration for Jackson Lee. [42] [43]
In the city controller race, Hollins ran running against Orlando Sanchez, Dave Martin, and Shannon Nobles. Houston Public Media identified Hollins and Sanchez as the primary contenders. [44] In the first round, Hollins obtained 45% of the vote and Sanchez earned 27%. With both being shy of the 50% plus one threshold, they advanced to a runoff. [45] On December 8, Hollins won the runoff against Sanchez. [46]
Hollins was elected City Controller on December 3, 2023. [47]
In spring of 2025, Hollins introduced a comprehensive audit plan to address the city’s $330 million budget deficit. The plan addressed 37 audit projects including compliance, and contract audits to identify cost savings, inefficiencies and waste. [48]
He also withheld certification of a proposed $1.5 billion settlement with the Houston firefighters' union until key fiscal questions were addressed. [49]
In May 2025, Hollins announced he would not certify the mayor’s proposed $7 billion 2026 budget. He stated that certification would not move forward without a trial court-approved settlement with the plaintiffs of a longstanding lawsuit stating the city was shortchanging a voter-mandated fund for street and drainage projects. [50] Hollins warned that the budget as proposed would require property taxes to be raised and services to be reduced if the lawsuit was not finalized before budget certification. [51]
In 2009, Hollins was a summer intern during the presidency of Barack Obama. [7] As a White House intern, Hollins worked in the Office of Presidential Personnel which oversees the selection process for presidential appointments. [7]
After his tenure as County Clerk, Hollins was appointed to sit on the Board of Directors of the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County. [52]
Hollins is the former Vice Chair of the Texas Democratic Party. [53]
Hollins lives in Houston's Third Ward neighborhood with his wife, Morgan, and their son and daughter. [54] The Hollins family attends Wheeler Avenue Baptist Church, and he serves on the advisory board of Interfaith Ministries for Greater Houston. [55] [56]
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