Background
Jones, Delwin was born on April 2, 1924.
Jones, Delwin was born on April 2, 1924.
He holds a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from Texas Technical University.
Jones was originally elected as a Democrat in 1964, when that party held 149 of the 150 seats in the Texas House. Jones was defeated for re-nomination in 1972 by cotton farmer Pete Laney of Hale Center, later the House Speaker. After a 12-year absence, Jones returned to the House in 1989 as a Republican.
A Lubbock resident, Jones earned his living from farming and investments.
The two met in Lubbock"s only bowling alley at the time. Mistress Jones was heavily involved in Habitat for Humanity in Lubbock.
Jones"s District 83 also included the outlying communities of Levelland, Denver City, Plains, Shallowater, Slaton, and Seminole, Texas. Jones drove through the district over the years in a 1995 Buick Le Sabre, passing out some 800,000 "Delwin Jones" emery boards to remind voters on pending elections.
Jones often begins his day of politicking meeting voters in some cafe.
At eighty-six, Jones was a candidate for renomination in the April 13, 2010, Republican runoff primary. Perry prevailed with 10,109 votes (578 percent) to Jones" 7,392 ballots (422 percent). Jones polled 291 more votes in the runoff than he had in the primary, but Perry"s total increased by 3,633 ballots over his initial showing.
In the March 2 primary, Jones, backed by the president of the Lubbock Educators Association interest group, led the field with 7,103 ballots (377 percent) to Perry"s 6,476 (344 percent).
The third candidate, Zach Brady, with 5,240 votes (278 percent), held the key to victory in the Jones-Perry showdown. Brady, a Lubbock attorney, raised more than $250,000 and carried the backing of business interest groups, but he was eliminated from the race by his third-place showing.
In the Republican primary held on May 29, 2012, Jones, at the age of eighty-eight, failed in a bid to unseat Perry. In 2014, Jones entered the special election to fill the seat in the District 28 seat in Texas State Senate vacated by Robert L. Duncan, who became chancellor of the Texas Technical University System.
In this race, he again faced Charles Perry as well as several other candidates, including two other Republicans, East. M. Garza and Jodey Arrington, and Democrat Greg Wortham.
On August 31, 2014, Jones was listed in critical condition from an undisclosed illness. Jones survived his illness. Upon his death, he will be interred at Texas State Cemetery in Austin.
He was defeated by Charles Perry, an accountant who ran a grass roots campaign with support of the Tea Party movement, also known as "Taxed Enough Already".
Married Reta Jones.