Until Monday, the only thing I knew about the race for governor in Arkansas was that former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders had thrown her hat into the ring. I was fully prepared to ignore the ensuing Trump-infused circus over the next two years. But then I saw a video pass across my Twitter timeline. Two minutes and 37 seconds later, I was convinced that this might be one of the most interesting campaigns in the country.
Chris Jones announced his candidacy for governor June 15. As I learned in his campaign’s announcement video, he is an actual nuclear physicist and an ordained minister as of 2017. He went to Morehouse College on a NASA scholarship and attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology for graduate school. And now he’s running to replace the term-limited Gov. Asa Hutchinson as leader of the state his family has lived in for eight generations now.
My family has been in this state for 7 generations. If there’s one thing that’s clear: Arkansas deserves better than division and discord.
— Chris Jones (@JonesForAR) June 15, 2021
I’m running for governor to build opportunity for all of us. #weARone #FaithInAR pic.twitter.com/XR0WyLOJwx
Political candidates, especially first-timers, are encouraged to figure out the story that they want to tell the voters. The best versions draw from both biography and policy, mixing them together into a personal narrative that the candidate implies will carry through into how they govern or legislate. And Jones’ team knocked this one out of the park.
As I sat with the video some more, it really dawned on me how incredible Jones’ resume is — and what it says about Black candidates for statewide office.
I was absolutely floored by the video’s genius use of his preacher’s stole to illustrate the passage of time, coupled with his explanation that “as a physicist, I know that time is also relative — and with the right application of energy, you can bend it.” That transition into a timeline of his family’s roots in the state and the emotions it conveyed were on point; the use of footage from Jan. 6 to illustrate the trauma that we lived through was also extremely well deployed.
But as I sat with the video some more, it really dawned on me how incredible Jones’ resume is — and what it says about Black candidates for statewide office.
Consider that just five years after earning dual master’s degrees in nuclear engineering and technology and policy from MIT, he was named the school’s assistant dean for graduate students. He got his doctorate from MIT while managing a multimillion-dollar budget as executive director of Boston’s Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative. He was leading a nonprofit, the Arkansas Regional Innovation Hub, which as the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette put it in a profile of Jones “promotes and encourages innovative ideas among, and creates opportunities for entrepreneurs, students and other makers” in the state until he resigned to run for governor.
He also checks all the boxes that we don’t say a Black man running for office needs to have — but they absolutely do. Jones is overly educated, far beyond the average white candidate. His wife, Dr. Jerrilyn Jones, and their daughters are featured prominently in the ad — no single, promiscuous African Americans here, just a wholesome upper middle-class family. His last role was all about jobs and businesses and other respectable capitalist ventures, not something confusing like “community organizer.” And the issues he focuses on — education, infrastructure, and “living out our values” — are solidly middle of the road, not too progressive — or too , well, Black — for Arkansas voters.
(Jerrilyn, I must add, is almost as freakishly well-credentialed as her husband is — she’s an Air Force veteran and graduate of Harvard Medical School who’s currently an ER doctor and serves as preparedness medical director at the Arkansas Department of Health. Together, their careers sound like what an eager kindergartner would say when asked what she wants to be when she grows up.)







