U.S. legislative service
In March 1969, Jones won the Democratic nomination for a special election to replace
Robert "Fats" Everett, Congressman from the 8th District in Northwest Tennessee, who had died in office. The election was unusual in that it was contested not only by the
Republicans but also by the
American Independent Party of
George Wallace, who did well in Northwest Tennessee in the previous year's presidential election. The other two candidates almost split the vote evenly in the March 25 contest; Jones won with a substantial plurality and was sworn in as soon as the results were certified. However, he was never again to face an election nearly this close. Jones was re-elected to a full term with less opposition in 1970. In 1972 his district was merged with the
Jackson-based 7th District of fellow Democrat
Ray Blanton. The resulting district was, if anything, even more Democratic than his previous district. While it retained Blanton's district number, geographically it was more Jones' district (it became the 8th once again after Tennessee regained a ninth district in the 1980 census). To avoid a primary election, Blanton ran, unsuccessfully, for the
United States Senate against Republican
Howard Baker. Jones retained his seat easily even as
Richard Nixon won 90 of Tennessee's 95 counties, including most of his district. He was reelected completely unopposed in 1974. In 1976,
Martin businessman and
state representative Larry Bates, an associate of high-profile
East Tennessee banker
Jake Butcher, ran against Jones in the Democratic
primary. This was the first (and as it turned out, only) serious challenge of any sort Jones faced. No other party put up a candidate, meaning that victory in the primary was
tantamount to election. Bates had a very
conservative record as a state representative, even by Tennessee Democratic standards of the time. He ran well to the right of the
moderate Jones and spent a large amount of money by the standards of
rural West Tennessee at the time. However, he made no real inroads in Jones' support and was heavily defeated. After this, Jones coasted to five more terms (including a completely unopposed run in 1984), choosing not to run for a 10th full term (11th overall) in 1988.
The Jackson Sun reported on February 14, 1988: "Jones says he's retiring simply because the time has come. He wants to spend more time with his wife, Llew, and with his granddaughter, Meghan." Jones co-sponsored over 100 bills that successfully entered into law during his tenure in Congress. Jones was the primary author of five bills that passed into law, all of them on agriculture. Among those bills was the Egg Research and Consumer Information Act of 1974, which lead to the creation of the
American Egg Board. ==Legacy==