ANALYSIS: What the Congressional Slumber Party on Gun Control Did -- And Didn’t -- Accomplish

Democrats staged a sit-in that lasted 26 hours.

“We must keep the faith and we must come back here on July 5 more determined than ever before,” Lewis said.

Despite the new tactic, it is likely that gun control will stay completely stagnant -- even though voters do want change. In a recent CBS News poll, 57 percent of Americans believe gun control laws should be more strict, while 29 percent believe laws should be kept as they are while 11 percent want them loosened.

The numbers become much more dramatic on the issue of background checks. A CNN/ORC poll from this month also asked about whether Americans want background checks and 92 percent favored them with only 8 percent opposing.

So is nothing accomplished with the congressional slumber party? Not exactly: Democratic constituents are able to see their representatives doing something on an issue in which they want progress. Local news all over the country reported which members took part so in districts where this matters they will know their member took action. That may not matter in the long run for gun control, but politically, yes, this could have impact.