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McDonnell’s decision to cross the aisle was not a quiet paperwork change but the culmination of a long, bitter clash between personal conviction and party discipline. As a former firefighter and union leader, he once fit the classic Midwestern Democratic mold. Yet his unwavering pro-life stance, shaped by his Catholic faith, steadily alienated him from party leadership, who restricted his role and ultimately voted to censure him.

Republican leaders now gain a crucial advantage in Nebraska’s unicameral Legislature: a 33-member bloc, just enough to break filibusters and drive a conservative agenda on abortion and other wedge issues. Democrats, led by state chair Jane Kleeb, frame McDonnell’s departure as proof of their commitment to reproductive freedom and LGBTQ rights. His switch exposes a deeper national fracture, where questions of faith, conscience, and party loyalty collide in the harshest possible light.

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