Eric Jones
is Fighting
for You
Join Our Movement
Meet Eric Jones
Eric Jones grew up in a military family, watched his father fight through repeated health challenges, and learned early what it means to struggle — and persevere. He went on to become the first in his family to graduate from college and later helped grow more than 100 American companies in industries like health care, education, clean energy, and technology.
Those companies lowered health care costs, expanded access to mental health services, and created opportunities for working families. After becoming a father, Eric moved to Napa to raise his family and founded a nonprofit fighting MAGA extremism and political disinformation online.
Now he’s running for Congress to restore the American Dream for every family — not just the wealthy few.
Eric’s Top Priorities
“I’m running for Congress because the American Dream is slipping away for too many families. Everything costs more while corporations and politicians look the other way. I’ve spent my career building businesses that lowered health care costs, expanded opportunity, and helped people get ahead — and I refuse to let a broken system stand in the way of our future.
My campaign is about three things: aspiration, affordability, and accountability. If we restore accountability, we can lower costs. If we lower costs, we can unlock aspiration. That’s the future I’m fighting for — and I’m asking you to join me.”
Making Life More Affordable
Too many families are working harder than ever but still falling behind, while large corporations pay little to no taxes and continue to gouge prices. Eric’s plan tackles the root causes of rising costs and puts money back into people’s pockets.
Key Policies:
$10,000 Middle-Class Tax Credit – real relief for working families
Crack down on PG&E’s high prices and monopoly abuses
Lower prescription drug costs
Zero-down loans for first-time homebuyers
Housing that workers, families, and seniors can afford
Lower health care and insurance costs
Make Corporations Pay Their Fair Share
Return corporate taxes to Obama-era levels
Close loopholes that let corporations like Big Pharma, Tesla, and PG&E pay zero
Use corporate tax dollars to fund programs that reduce costs for families
Accountability and Results for Our Community
Americans deserve a government that works for them, not for big corporations and special interests. Eric’s plan ensures that power and money are held accountable, and that everyday families can thrive.
Key Policies:
Ban all corporate PAC money – ensure politicians are accountable to voters, not corporations
Hold PG&E accountable for corruption, negligence, and safety failures
End Big Pharma price gouging and protect families from skyrocketing medical costs
Make multi-billion-dollar corporations pay their fair share
Transparency & ethics reforms in Washington to restore trust
Tie corporate responsibility to affordability outcomes – corporations must be part of the solution
Restoring the American Dream for Every Family
The American Dream should be within reach for every family. Eric’s plan invests in housing, care, jobs, and opportunity to ensure that working families can build a secure, prosperous future.
Key Policies:
Build 2 million homes a year to lower housing costs and expand access
First-time homebuyer tax credit to help renters become owners
National Housing Bank: turn rent into down payments and make homeownership attainable
Affordable in-home child and senior care to support families
Invest in the jobs and industries of the future – clean energy, tech, and skilled trades
Expand affordable access to mental health care so families can thrive
Congressional District 04
California’s new 4th Congressional District stretches from parts of Sonoma County through Napa and into the Northern Sacramento Valley, covering communities across Yolo, Colusa, Sutter, and Yuba Counties, with a small portion of Placer County. It’s a district made up of farming and vineyard communities, small towns, and growing families — all facing shared challenges around affordability, housing, wildfire resilience, and the need for leaders who put people before corporations.