Georgia House of Representatives Jones was elected to the
Georgia House of Representatives in 1992, representing
Georgia's 71st House of Representatives district, succeeding Sidney Pope Jones Jr. Jones served from 1993 to 2001, during which time he was a member of the Appropriations Committee, the Insurance Committee, and the Health & Ecology Committee, as well as the Banking Committee, and a special Judiciary Committee.
DeKalb County CEO Jones was elected as
chief executive officer of
DeKalb County, Georgia, in 2000, winning 64% of the vote, and was re-elected in 2004 with 54% of the vote. Jones is the first
African American to serve as CEO of the county. During his administration, DeKalb County established the first local Homeland Security Office in 2001. He requested and received Congressional designation of
Arabia Mountain as a
National Heritage Area. However, Jones's term as DeKalb County CEO was also known for controversies and accusations of improprieties. Shortly after taking office Jones went back on his campaign pledge to keep the homestead exemption sales tax in place. He was criticized for vetoing pay raises for police officers. In January 2005, the Georgia State Ethics Commission sanctioned Jones for campaign contribution limit violations in his 2004 reelection campaign. Under a Consent Order, Jones returned all excess contributions and personally paid a $7,500 civil penalty. Jones apologized and stated that changes in campaign finance laws between the initial election and the run-off election were the reason for his acceptance of nineteen improper campaign contributions.
2008 United States Senate campaign Jones ran for the U.S. Senate in 2008, but was defeated 60% to 40% in the 2008 run-off for Georgia's Democratic U.S. Senate primary. On March 23, 2007, Jones announced he was running for the
United States Senate against incumbent Republican
Saxby Chambliss. Jones was criticized by his chief rival Jim Martin over his more conservative politics and past support for
George W. Bush. In response, Jones blamed his "liberal opponents backed by the
liberal media" for trying to ruin his campaign. Jones was also criticized for the appearance of the tagline "Vote Vernon Jones for GA Senate" on tickets, produced using county funds, for the Dekalb County Blues and Jazz Festival. The company who printed the tickets, supporters of Jones' campaign, took responsibility for the incident; saying that they were unaware campaign finance laws made such an action illegal. In the July 15, 2008 Democratic primary election, Jones won a plurality of votes in the Democratic primary. However, Georgia law requires a majority; if no majority is reached by a candidate, the two top vote-getters must face one another in a runoff. On August 5, 2008, Jones lost the
run-off election to
Jim Martin by a margin of 20 points. Jones unexpectedly lost to Martin in his home base of Dekalb County. Jones had lost support within the Black community before the runoff election, and only captured two-thirds of the Black vote in the head-to-head match up against Martin. The Black turnout in the run-off was also substantially lower than the initial primary election, further hurting Jones' chances in the runoff.
Unsuccessful races In
2010, Jones launched an unsuccessful campaign for the U.S. Congress in
Georgia's 4th congressional district. In 2014, Jones ran unsuccessfully for
Sheriff of DeKalb County, GA. He lost to incumbent Sheriff Jeff Mann, 76% to 24%.
Return to the Georgia House In March 2016, Jones filed to run for Georgia House of Representatives, this time in
House District 91, an open seat vacated by
Dee Dawkins-Haigler. In the May 2016 Democratic primary election, Jones came within sixty votes of an outright victory, but was forced into a runoff election with Rhonda Taylor. Jones won the July runoff election and in November 2016, once again won election to the Georgia House, defeating Republican Carl Anuszczyk.
Endorsement of Donald Trump and change in party affiliation On April 14, 2020, Jones became the first state elected Democratic official in Georgia to endorse President
Donald Trump's
re-election bid. Jones said he had no plans to switch political parties and cited Trump's "handling of the economy, his support for
historically black colleges and his
criminal justice initiatives" as reasons for his endorsement. Jones was swiftly disowned by Georgia Democrats, many of whom announced support for Jones' primary challenger,
Rhonda Taylor. After initially saying he would resign from the state House, Jones reversed himself and said that he would complete the rest of his term, but would not seek reelection. Jones addressed the
Republican National Convention in August 2020 and reiterated his endorsement of Trump. On October 16, 2020, Jones spoke at a Trump rally in
Macon, Georgia and crowd-surfed afterwards, which drew criticism as it occurred in the middle of a
pandemic with a mostly maskless crowd. Jones promoted and perpetuated
Trump's false claims of election fraud in the 2020 presidential election. Jones withdrew his bid for re-election in 2020 and his term ended on January 11, 2021. On January 6, 2021, he spoke at
the rally in Washington D.C. before Trump's own speech, saying that he stands "firm for President Donald J. Trump" and announcing that he was changing his party affiliation from Democrat to Republican amid cheers from the audience; after the rally, the
pro-Trump protesters stormed the United States Capitol Building.
2022 Georgia gubernatorial election In April 2021, Jones announced his intention to declare a run in the
2022 Georgia gubernatorial election against incumbent Republican
Brian Kemp. He was joined by 107th
Mayor of New York City Rudy Giuliani and 40th
New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik in his announcement. His announcement came after movement from Republicans to challenge Kemp in the challenge, after
Donald Trump criticized Kemp for refusing to overturn the results of the
2020 presidential election in Georgia. Jones trailed Kemp and former Senator
David Perdue in the Republican primary polls. In February 2022, Jones announced that he was suspending his campaign and endorsed Perdue.
2022 United States House campaign After withdrawing his candidacy for governor, Jones announced he would run for the
United States House of Representatives in
Georgia's 10th congressional district. He entered the crowded Republican primary with the endorsement of former President Donald Trump. Jones pledged if elected, he would introduce articles of impeachment against President
Joe Biden and Vice President
Kamala Harris. In May 2022, Jones placed second in the primary behind trucking executive
Mike Collins. Neither candidate got above 50% of the vote so the two advanced to a runoff in June 2022, which Jones lost.
2026 Georgia Secretary of State election On October 13, 2025, Jones announced his campaign for Secretary of State in
2026. ==Political positions==