We talked briefly last week about a fascinating congressional special election in Chicago — the race to fill the vacancy left by former Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D) — which has taken on unexpected national implications. That it’s the first congressional race since the 2012 election, and the first since the massacre in Newtown, lent it additional weight.
And as it turns out, it’s also been the first race in recent memory in which support from the National Rifle Association proved to be a real problem for certain candidates. By some measures, the issue drove the election, and catapulted Democrat Robin Kelly to victory.
The outcome of the contest, which had been unexpectedly cast into the center of the national gun debate, was welcome news for Michael R. Bloomberg, the mayor of New York and a staunch gun-control advocate. He poured more than $2.2 million into attacking Ms. Kelly’s chief opponent, Debbie Halvorson, this month. […]
The advertising campaign, a huge amount for a single House race, set up Ms. Halvorson’s defeat on Tuesday as a shot across the bow to other Democrats supporting gun rights, a sign of what could await future candidates who do not align with Mr. Bloomberg’s quest to change firearm laws across the country.
In the end, it wasn’t even close — despite an enormous field of candidates, Kelly won the primary with over 50% of the vote, and is the overwhelming favorite to win the general election on April 9.
Stepping back, the larger question is whether this is a sign of things to come.








