Former Navy SEAL Gabriel Gomez knew his race for the United States Senate would be challenging, but there is no way he could have imagined it would turn out quite this way.
Gomez, the son of Colombian immigrants, faces two other Republican candidates in Tuesday’s primary in Massachusetts, where a special election is being held to fill the seat previously held by now-Secretary of State John Kerry.
Gomez started the race little known and well behind former U.S. attorney and former state legislator Mike Sullivan and state Rep. Dan Winslow but started gaining ground by outspending his opponents and airing more television ads.
Then the Boston bombings happened and all of the candidates temporarily suspended campaign activities at a critical moment in the race, just two weeks before Election Day.
Gomez ran and finished the Boston Marathon, and met with his family at the finish line, just minutes before the explosions. He also attended the subsequent interfaith prayer service with the other candidates.
Finally back on the campaign trail, Gomez asserted his financial advantage once again and was the only Republican candidate with a significant television ad buy (including ads in the expensive Boston media market) in the final days of the race.
In total, Gomez spent more than $300,000 on ads, while Sullivan and Winslow hardly spent anything, according to sources who tracked the spending.









