Sam Jones is the former mayor of Franklin, Louisiana who served from 1982 until 2004 when he resigned in the middle of his sixth term as mayor to join the staff of new elected governor of LouisianaKathleen Babineaux Blanco as special assistant to the governor. Jones served as mayor during the notable number of years that included several hurricane events most notably Hurricane Andrew which passed directly through Franklin. Upon the retirement of Governor Blanco, Jones was elected as a Democratic member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for District 50 in southern Louisiana, primarily St. Mary Parish, but with one precinct in Iberia Parish and two others in St. Martin Parish. Jones notably was a seat mate and roommate with Governor John Bel Edwards when Governor Edwards served in the Louisiana House of Representatives. Edwards credited Jones as being his "first true believer who worked tirelessly" as an organizer and strategist and de facto campaign manager for most of the campaign in his unexpected landslide victory over then United StatesSenator David Vitter in the 2015 Governor's election. Jones graduated in 1975 with a Bachelor of Arts in History from Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, Louisiana where he was also a member of the Nicholls State baseball team. He is not related to former Governor Sam H. Jones of Lake Charles. In 2007, Jones was first elected to the House in a runoff with a fellow Democrat, Allen Anthony McElroy, Jr., an attorney from Berwick, 4,110 votes to 3,604. Jones was unopposed for a second term in 2011 and again unopposed for a third and final term in 2015. Representative Jones is a member of the Louisiana Rural Caucus, the Acadiana delegation, and the Democratic Caucus. He sits on these committees: Natural Resources and Environment, Retirement, and Transportation, Highways, and Public Works. Jones ranks between 49 and 78 percent in legislative ratings from the conservativeLouisiana Association of Business and Industry. Except for one year, he has since 2008 been rated 100 percent by Louisiana Right to Life. In 2014, Jones voted for the requirement that abortion providers have hospital admitting privileges near their clinics. That same year, he voted to extend the time for implementation of the Common Core State Standards Initiative. He also voted to forbid the practice of transporting dogs in open truck beds on interstate highways. In 2013, Jones voted to increase judicial pay and for lifetime concealed carry gun permits. In 2012, he voted to prohibit the use of cell phones while driving and opposed the use of state tax incentives to recruit a National Basketball Association team to Louisiana. In 2012, he supported the requirement for drug testing of welfare recipients. He opposed reducing the number of hours that polling locations remain open. On April 17, 2017, Representative Jones, who is term-limited for his House seat in the 2019 state elections, introduced legislation pushed by Democratic Governor John Bel Edwards to establish a gross receipts tax on businesses within Louisiana. Known as a commercial activity tax or CAT, Jones' bill focuses on the total revenue, without expense deductions, that an organization obtains from all sources. If adopted, the tax would apply to most businesses, including corporations, partnerships, and limited liability companies.