About Us:
The United Progressive Party of South Africa (UPROPSA) is a party mandated by God and therefore we only endorse biblical values and principles.
We are an independent and impartial party who has the best interest and desires for the freedom of our people by allowing them to be governed by God Himself. UPROPSA emphasizes the right to equality, economic balance, and the right to self-determination enshrined within section 235 of the Constitution of South Africa.
We do not subscribe to the ideology of a particular people group to reign and rule over the nation of South Africa.
We do not stand for biases and prejudices being practiced and conducted in any form.
UPROPSA believes in having an economic system in which the means of production and distribution are privately or corporately owned.
Private individuals, small businesses, organizations, and corporations make independent decisions about prices, production and distribution of goods, ideally resulting in a self-regulating market.
Vote for Us:
We put the need of the people ahead of us.
We do not aspire to personal and ill-gotten gain.
We aim to interact with you and your community on different levels of engagement.
Our leadership is extremely competent and experienced and we offer you our hand in partnering with you.
We stand for justice and righteousness in every sphere of governance.
We promise to address the past and present injustices that affected our nation negatively, by confronting it, dealing with it, and ensuring that it never happens again in the future.
More about Gerald Rupert
His first Democratic Local Election took place in 1996 in Ward T31 Tygerberg Municipality in Cape Town Belhar where he stood against the ANC and won that Ward for the then National Party (NP).
He also served on the corporate service committee of Tygerberg Municipality as the Deputy Chairperson of the bargaining council with WECLOGO. He then became a member of the International Institute of Municipal Clerks. In the year 2000 he represented the City of Tygerberg Municipality in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The operations of municipalities were discussed as the main agenda.




