It worked. Bloomberg's candidate, former Illinois lawmaker Robin Kelly,
sailed past more than a dozen rivals to win the Democratic primary in
this Chicago-area district where guns became the main issue. Because the
district is overwhelmingly Democratic, Kelly is widely expected to win
the April 9 general election and head to Washington.
Bloomberg's super PAC, Independence USA, boasted Wednesday that the
race would be its template for future elections. But political experts
and public officials were skeptical if the effort can be replicated
elsewhere.
"That is a harbinger of what is to come," said Bloomberg pollster Doug Schoen, who worked previously for President Bill Clinton. "While Chicago
may not be the rest of the country, I have been at this 35 years, and
I've yet to find an elected official who does not look at an election
like this and sit up and take notice."
Kelly's victory generated buzz far beyond the city. Bloomberg said her win showed the public had spoken. Vice President Joe Biden said the victory sent an anti-gun message, and congressmen worried about the repercussions.
Bloomberg is perhaps the single
most influential figure in the national gun debate, beyond even
President Barack Obama and Biden, because of his deep pockets. The NRA's
political action committee raised $1.1 million last month, a trivial
amount compared with the billions that Bloomberg has at his disposal.
"The voters of this congressional district understood that they and
their children and grandchildren are at risk with guns on the streets,"
Bloomberg said Wednesday in Washington after meeting with the vice
president to discuss efforts to curb gun violence.
But political experts have
doubts. They point to the unusual circumstances that shaped the race: It
was the first wide-open primary since 1995, with a truncated campaign
season of just three months. It was an off-cycle contest that drew only
14 percent voter turnout. And Chicago
— where all the top city leaders are already advocates of an
assault-weapons ban — has seen a spike in street violence. More than 40
people were killed in Chicago last month, the deadliest January in a
decade.
"He pummeled the race in one direction, and (most) of the people
didn't participate," said Thom Serafin, a longtime Chicago political
consultant. "If they're going to take that model around the country,
good luck."Bloomberg's foray into congressional contests has been inconsistent so far.
He formed his super PAC weeks before the November election and has spent more than $12 million to back roughly half a dozen candidates nationwide. Guns weren't an issue in all of the races, and when they were, he didn't always support the strongest anti-gun advocate.
In another Chicago-area district, he backed repugican incumbent Rep. Bob Dold over newcomer Democrat Brad Schneider, even when Schneider had a stronger anti-gun stance. Dold lost.
Bloomberg has also supported candidates outside of major urban
centers. He backed newly elected Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod, a
California Democrat who ousted an incumbent, in a district east of Los
Angeles that's a mix of industrial and farming communities hit hard by
the economic downturn.The NRA said Kelly's victory doesn't prove anything about Bloomberg's influence, particularly since the gun-rights group didn't spend anything on the race. A better example, the group said, would be last year's campaign in central Florida, where NRA-backed Rep. Dan Webster defeated a Democratic challenger backed by Bloomberg.
"He just spent over $2 million to hold arguably the deepest blue seat in the U.S. House, in a race where the NRA spent zero and had no involvement," NRA chief lobbyist Chris Cox said.
In the Chicago area, the super PAC's negative ads blanketed the airways for weeks. They targeted former Rep. Debbie Halvorson, who opposes an assault-weapons ban, and pointed out her previous high ratings from the NRA. Even though Halvorson opposed a ban, she supports gun registration and universal background checks. She accused Bloomberg of trying to buy an election, something other candidates echoed.
Kelly, who has been a longtime anti-gun candidate, said she has never been in touch with Bloomberg. Such contact is forbidden by election law. She said her message had been the same since she ramped up campaigning in early December.
"We didn't veer from that strategy," she said. "The voters put me in."
Still, some Democratic candidates in politically mixed, rural districts would probably prefer not to have Bloomberg's help.
Democrat Rep. Rick Nolan represents an economically challenged, mostly rural stretch of rural northern Minnesota, a popular hunting destination. He won re-election by more than 10 percentage points last year after NRA leaders campaigned heavily against him in the closing days of the campaign. Nolan, a lifelong hunter, has supported gun control and said he would back an assault-weapons ban in light of last year's mass shootings.
If Bloomberg's group were to draw even more attention to Nolan's position on guns, the effort could hurt him politically, said Steve Johnson, a senior Nolan aide.
"In districts where the gun issue cuts across people with deeply held views," Johnson said, "it becomes more difficult to talk about jobs and the economy when that debate competes for center stage."
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