Cagle got his wish when Georgia’s Republican-controlled Senate passed a new “tax reform” bill that will hit Delta with an additional $40 million in state taxes.

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This is the same Delta Air Lines that employs 33,000 people in Georgia, provides over $300 million annually through taxes to Georgia state and local governments, and donates over $12 million a year to charities, nonprofits and educational programs. This also happens to be the same Delta Air Lines that gave 60 percent of its political contributions to Republicans in the 2016 cycle.

You know that phrase, “Cut off your nose to spite your face”? This move by Republicans in Georgia is like castrating oneself to spite an ex-girlfriend. The state GOP has just shot itself in the foot, which only helps Stacey Abrams run a little bit faster.

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Sucker punching the state’s biggest economic engine may be a short-term boost for Casey Cagle among the far-right pro-guns-on-planes-and-in-churches GOP primary voter, but it will blow up in his face when he faces Abrams in the general election.

Abrams has been leading her primary opponent Stacey Evans in the polls for months, out-raising her, out-campaigning her and getting much more national attention. In fact, the only area where Evans seems to have taken the lead over Abrams is among the very small Martin Luther King Jr. blackface constituency, which I’m pretty sure won’t be enough to pull off an upset.

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Now that guns are in the picture, the gap between the Democratic candidates will get even wider. Abrams not only publicly applauded Delta’s stance against the NRA but also boasted about how she’s never received an NRA stamp of approval. Evans currently holds a B-plus rating with the group.

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While publicly the two candidates have both called for repealing the Georgia “guns everywhere” bill that passed in 2014, Evans has maintained a much cozier relationship with the NRA than most Democrats in a primary would like to have right now.

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Again, while Abrams has received an F by the NRA Political Victory Fund, Evans has a B-plus, which means that regardless of her recent rhetoric, she can be trusted to carry water for the NRA when the bullets start flying. Literally. Speaking of flying, now back to Delta.

Anybody who thinks that a huge corporation is going to just take it on the chin when a political candidate takes a swipe at it doesn’t know American politics. If there is one thing big business hates in America, even conservative big businesses, it’s being told how to handle that business by politicians (remember how right-wing NFL owners responded when Donald Trump lectured them on player protests?).

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It’s midterm time, and for Atlanta politicians, it’s campaign “Beggin’ Season” (not to be confused with “Robbin’ Season,” which has its own gun problems), and Delta Air Lines can cancel checks to the GOP faster than it can cancel a flight. Republicans better hope Delta just stays neutral, but if the company puts its powerful economic influence behind Abrams, it’s a wrap.

How is Casey Cagle going to respond when Delta announces it can’t finish donating to that children’s pediatric-cancer wing because Republicans chose guns over jobs? How is Cagle going to be a pro-business Republican when the state’s biggest employer will see Abrams as the more reasonable candidate? What happens if Delta starts flirting with cutting jobs in Georgia or, worse, flirting with everyone’s favorite second city, Charlotte, N.C.?

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Republicans in Georgia have made guns an economics issue that Democrats can actually win with.

This fall, Stacey Abrams will have a possible blue wave, national media attention, the right gun position and the largest employer in Georgia on her side, or, at least, not supporting the Republicans. That’s a pretty potent combination. Republicans are about to learn what happens when you bring a tax bill to a gun fight. I hope Cagle and the Republicans think fighting for a $5 discount for the NRA is worth losing the governor’s mansion.