U.S. House of Representatives
Elections 2018–2019 On December 5, 2017, Representative
John Conyers resigned after sexual harassment allegations were made against him and that he had secretly used taxpayer money to settle a harassment claim. A special election was called to replace Conyers and Jones narrowly won the Democratic primary for the special election–the real contest in this heavily Democratic, black-majority district. No
Republican qualified to run. Conyers had held the seat since 1965 (it had been numbered as the 1st from 1965 to 1993 and as the 14th from 1993 to 2013), and his lowest winning percentage was 77 percent. However, in the Democratic primary for the general election, Jones was defeated by former state representative
Rashida Tlaib. Prior to the general election, Jones filed to run as an independent write-in candidate, prompting criticism. During the course of the election campaign, questions arose as to whether Jones could serve in her Detroit City Council post
concurrently with serving in Congress, an unprecedented situation up to that point. An opinion by the Detroit Corporation Counsel, written in August 2018, stated that it was likely possible for Jones to legally serve in both capacities based on state law. The Counsel advised that the
United States House Committee on Ethics be consulted to clarify federal and House rules. In the November 6 special election, Jones won with 86.8 percent of the vote, facing only a
Taxpayers Party candidate as opposition. On the same day, she received 633 votes in the regular election for a full two-year term.
Speaker Paul Ryan delayed swearing Jones in until November 29, after receiving guidance from the
House Ethics Committee on how Jones could minimize conflicts of interest. She introduced two bills and cast 77 votes during her five-week tenure in the House of Representatives.
2020 On March 25, 2020, Jones filed to run again in the Democratic primary for Michigan's 13th congressional district against Tlaib. Tlaib was considered possibly vulnerable to a primary challenge, due to her status as a
democratic socialist, divisive rhetoric and attacks made on popular national Democrats. For example, Tlaib booed former Secretary of State and 2016 Democratic Nominee
Hillary Clinton. However, Jones's campaign was wracked by allegations of financial misconduct. Jones decisively lost the primary election to Tlaib 66%-34% on August 4. The margin of Jones's loss was considered to be large. ==Electoral history==