In his shadow cabinet portfolio, Schreiber represented the DA in the Portfolio Committee on Public Service and Administration.[12] He was also appointed to the Section 194 Enquiry into Busisiwe Mkhwebane's impeachment as Public Protector.[17] In addition, in December 2021, he was appointed as one of the DA's 12 whips,[18] and on 21 April 2023, he was appointed as strategy and communications advisor to DA leader Steenhuisen.[19]
Cadre deployment
As Shadow Minister of Public Service and Administration, Schreiber was best known for his attacks on the cadre deployment policy of the governing ANC. In February 2021, he tabled a private member's bill, the Public Administration Laws General Amendment Bill, which the DA nicknamed the End Cadre Deployment Bill. Introduced by Schreiber during the State of the Nation Address debate,[20] it included several measures to enforce meritocracy in the public service, including criminal prohibitions against political interference in non-political appointments, prohibitions against holding political office while employed in the public service, and increased protections for the independence of the Public Service Commission. In September 2023, the bill was defeated in the National Assembly by 201 votes to 123, despite support from several other opposition parties. The ANC concurred with the Portfolio Committee on Public Service's finding that the bill conflicted with existing policy initiatives on the professionalisation of the public service.[21][22]
Meanwhile, in January 2022, the State Capture Commission published minutes of meetings of the ANC's internal cadre deployment committee. During a media briefing on 12 January 2022, Schreiber announced that the DA would submit formal complaints to the Public Service Commission on the basis that the minutes revealed party-political interference in public appointments.[23][24] Schreiber said that, based on the DA's analysis of the minutes, cadre deployment had continued "unabated" under the incumbent President, Cyril Ramaphosa.[25]
Schreiber also led the DA's campaign to gain access to further records from the ANC cadre deployment committee. After a prolonged court battle, the DA received the records in February 2024 pursuant to a Constitutional Court order in ANC v Schreiber. Schreiber congratulated his party on "piercing the ANC's veil of cadre secrets", saying that, "the ANC has been forced to bend the knee before the DA".[26] However, later the same month, the Pretoria High Court dismissed a related application by the DA to have the ANC's cadre deployment policy declared unconstitutional.[27]
Stellenbosch University
Schreiber's DA constituency was Stellenbosch,[5] and during the parliamentary term he was a prominent activist in connection with ongoing debate about Stellenbosch University's language policy. In October 2019, he resigned from the university's Institutional Forum in protest of its 2016 language policy, which preferred English over Afrikaans as the medium of instruction; Schreiber said that he would not "be complicit in the takeover of our society" and in the suppression of indigenous languages.[28] In November 2020 he promised an "unprecedented campaign" to fight for the reversal of the language policy,[29] and in March 2021 he launched a public petition in that vein, calling for the protection of language rights "against persistent attacks by university management".[30][31] He accused the university administration, under Rector Wim de Villiers, of being "anti-Afrikaans".[32]
Also in early 2021, Schreiber led the DA in filing a complaint against Stellenbosch University with the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), alleging that it was a rights violation for the university's residences to institute rules prohibiting conversations in Afrikaans in certain common spaces. The SAHRC found against the university in March 2023.[33] The SAHRC complaint stimulated extensive public debate, with Schreiber's critics accusing him of "cheap politicking",[34] of needlessly polarising rhetoric,[35] of resorting to racist dog whistles,[36] and of reinforcing a false dichotomy between anti-racism and the promotion of Afrikaans.[37]
Minister of Home Affairs: 2024–present
Schreiber was re-elected to his seat in the National Assembly in the May 2024 general election, ranked 16th on the DA's national party list.[12] On 30 June, in line with a coalition agreement between the DA and ANC, President Ramaphosa announced that he is to be appointed the cabinet as Minister of Home Affairs.[38][39][40] The ANC's Njabulo Nzuza was appointed as his deputy.[41] In the aftermath of the cabinet announcement, there were false reports that Schreiber was born in Zimbabwe, stemming from the circulation on social media of a vandalised Wikipedia article about him.[3]
After he was sworn in as minister on 3 July 2024,[1] Schreiber said that his initial priority in the Department of Home Affairs would be "getting the basics right", reducing backlogs through technological interventions and business process reforms.[42] He also expressed support for improving access to visas for skilled immigrants, as well as for a "zero tolerance" approach to corruption.[42]