I am the retagger and cast one of the close votes. I found this question while doing a general sweep for undetected duplicates of questions about backslashes qua string and/or regex escapes.
an edit to the tags on the question: remove python-3.x, add python (since the second individual has a gold python badge - but not a gold python-3.x?)
The question is not in any way 3.x specific, and every 3.x question is a Python question anyway. (Which reminds me, I wanted to discuss better ways to handle these kinds of tags.)
IMHO the re-tagging of the question to gain additional power to make unilateral changes is one thing
Re-tagging the question did not give me this power - since the question never previously had the Python tag, it prevented me from wielding Mjollnir. However, PM 2Ring also has a gold badge, and thus was able to close the question afterwards without waiting for a third person. I solicited the help; PM evidently agreed with my assessment.
While the linked question does address a similar topic/question (backslashes for escaping characters in Python strings), in no way could its answers have single-handedly helped answer/address the OP, even today.
I voted to close the question because - after reading the accepted answer - I concluded that the OP hadn't actually had a problem figuring out the regex, but instead misinterpreted the output.
The second example in the OP:
>>> re.sub(r'(.*?)(".*?)',r'\1\\\2',data, re.MULTILINE)
' {\n value1: \\"blah\\",\n value2: \'foo<a href=\\"example.com\\">bar</a>\',\n }'
gives the correct result, as explained in the accepted answer and as seen in the update. The accepted answer is about explaining why that result is correct - which is the same problem as in the linked duplicate, with the same explanation. "Backslashes appear twice", as the linked duplicate puts it, because single backslashes in the actual text need to be escaped in the string's representation. The string correctly contains a single backslash in each intended position.
I agree that the question is not useful as a duplicate - nobody with that string backslash problem would ever use search terms that would realistically find this question. Which is why I'm also voting to delete it.
If it were asked today, I very likely would hammer it with the same duplicate target. Unless it appeared that the conceptual problem was understood and this was just an oversight, in which case the question should instead be closed as not reproducible.