
It’s no secret that Jon Jones wants back in and he’s pulling out all the stops to make it happen. The former UFC heavyweight champion has gone full-throttle. In his campaign to convince Dana White to include him in the UFC’s historic White House event. Slated for June 2026, releasing a new promotional video that’s as star-spangled as it is strategic.
In a high-production spot for one of his sponsors, Ketone, Jones leans hard into American symbolism complete with screeching eagles, waving flags, and montages of military heroism intertwined with his own training clips.
At the heart of it all is a clear message: Jones wants to represent America on the sport’s grandest stage the White House lawn and he wants Alex Pereira standing across from him.
“In the summer of 2026, America turns 250 years old, and I couldn’t be more proud to call myself an American,” Jones says in the video. “I love this country; the people, the promise, the fight. This nation was built on courage and conflict on the belief that we could take on the biggest, the boldest, and come out victorious. That’s how I’ve lived my life.”
As the video crescendos with flashes of Pereira landing knockouts and Jones grinding through training sessions, the pitch becomes unmistakable a collision of two champions framed as a celebration of America’s fighting spirit.
Jon Jones releases a promo video for a potential fight at the White House
“It just makes sense. The best country on earth
the best fighter on earth.”
(via @JonnyBones) pic.twitter.com/wZedkWZ3lY
— Championship Rounds (@ChampRDS) November 12, 2025
Jones’ message, while stirring, lands amid uncertainty about his relationship with the promotion.
After ducking a heavyweight unification bout with Tom Aspinall and announcing a sudden retirement earlier this year. The 36-year-old left UFC scrambling to realign the division. White has since expressed hesitation about including Jones in the White House event not only due to logistics but also the history of last-minute reversals that have plagued Jones’ otherwise legendary career.
Still, the former champion insists this time is different.
“Maybe somewhere iconic, or maybe on a certain someone’s lawn,” Jones continues in the ad. “All I know is, I’m fueled up, fired up, and ready. God bless the United States of America, and God bless the fighters who carry its spirit.”
Jones’ timing is calculated. Alex Pereira, the reigning light heavyweight champion, has already made it known he wants the fight. Pereira publicly called out Jones earlier this month, saying, “Jon Jones. White House. Chama.”
With both men publicly campaigning for the same matchup. The idea of Jones vs. Pereira at the White House has transformed from fantasy booking into the biggest “what-if” in combat sports.
From a marketing standpoint, it’s the dream pairing the UFC’s greatest American champion versus its most fearsome active finisher, on the most patriotic stage imaginable.
UFC CEO Dana White has made clear he’s not ready to hand Jones a main event slot. Noting that the card is still being developed. But with the event representing both a sporting and cultural milestone. Celebrating America’s 250th anniversary the pull of a Jones-Pereira spectacle may become too big to resist.
For now, Jones is doing what he does best. Keeping the spotlight trained directly on himself while letting the UFC brass feel the pressure.
If Dana White relents, and Jon Jones really is “fueled up and fired up,” the White House could host the most audacious fight in UFC history a patriotic spectacle starring the sport’s most polarizing legend.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!