Politics & Government
State Sen. Mike McDonnell In Crosshairs Of Fellow Douglas County Dems On Abortion, Trans Debates
He wanted to join the central committee of the county party.

By Aaron Sanderford
February 23, 2023
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OMAHA β The Douglas County Democratic Party this week soundly rejected the leadership bid by a Democratic state senator who could cast the decisive vote to effectively ban elective abortions in Nebraska.
The county partyβs steering group voted 17-3 Wednesday against a push by State Sen. Mike McDonnell of Omaha to join the central committee of the county party that is home to the stateβs largest pocket of Democrats.
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Several Omaha abortion rights advocates, women, LGBTQ Nebraskans and allies spoke out against McDonnellβs bid during the meeting, including former Omaha City Councilwoman Brenda Council, who said he should know better.
Some said they wanted to express their displeasure with his position on abortion by defeating his bid. They said they hope the vote helps him reconsider his support for and co-sponsorship of new abortion restrictions and anti-trans legislation.
Women fired up
Karin Waggoner, who voted against McDonnellβs bid, said Democratic women are furious about his boosting the bill that would further restrict abortions, and she said people who care about LGBTQ teens are angry, too.
βThis vote was about sending a strong message that we donβt support elected officials who support the legislation of law that directly hurts vulnerable humans,β Waggoner told the Nebraska Examiner.
Douglas County Democratic Party Chairman C.J. King, reached Thursday, said the Democrats who objected to McDonnell joining the central committee argued he is acting against some of the partyβs core beliefs.
βFor many of our members, sponsoring the βheartbeat billβ and the trans legislation was a step too far,β said King, a longtime friend of McDonnellβs.
Sponsoring bills
McDonnell is the sole Democratic co-sponsor of Republican Sen. Joni Albrechtβs Legislative Bill 626, which would ban abortions after an ultrasound detects embryonic cardiac activity, typically at about six weeks.
He also is the only Democratic co-sponsor of GOP Sen. Kathleen Kauthβs Legislative Bills 574 and 575, which would prohibit gender-affirming care for trans people under age 19 and require trans student-athletes to play high school sports based on their gender at birth.
His votes matter more this session than in previous ones because while the Legislature remains divided on the most controversial legislation, it has tilted more conservative. McDonnell could cast the pivotal 33rd vote for cloture that would enable the abortion bill to pass.
Nebraska Democratic Party Chair Jane Kleeb said she has had conversations with McDonnell about where the party stands. She said she explained that the party fundamentally disagrees with his stances on those issues.
βWe feel really strongly about these bills that they will do harm,β Kleeb said.
However, she said, he remains a Democrat, and there is room in the party for him.
McDonnell says heβs been βconsistentβ
McDonnell, in an interview Thursday at the Capitol, said he was upfront when he ran for the Legislature in 2016 about being anti-abortion and about his Catholic faith. He said he has been a Democrat since 1984.
βIβve been consistent and made that statement from Day One,β he said. βIf people werenβt aware of that, if they didnβt realize what that meant, then I understand that they have questions and try to answer them.β
McDonnell said his support of the βheartbeat billβ would remain the same whether he was the billβs 15th vote, 49th vote or 33rd vote. He backed legislation last year that would have banned abortion outright. That legislation failed to pass.
He did not directly address his co-sponsorship of the trans bills.
But he said he understood the county partyβs vote on Wednesday.
βThereβs people that didnβt want me to be part of that,β he said of the county central committee. βIf they want to invite me there in the future to talk to them, I will.β
Possible run for Omaha mayor
During the interview, McDonnell acknowledged the persistent rumor that he has been considering a bid for Omaha mayor as a Democrat. He is.
He declined to discuss potential similarities between his anti-abortion stance and that of the last high-profile Democrat to run for Omaha mayor: former State Sen. Heath Mello. Mello lost a close race to incumbent Mayor Jean Stothert in 2017.
Data analysis after the election showed that Melloβs anti-abortion stance was a factor in his loss. He was hampered by lower-than-expected voter turnout among Democratic and nonpartisan women, groups who described abortion rights as important.
For example, about 4,000 fewer Democratic women voted in the 2017 mayorβs race than in the 2013 mayorβs race.
βWhatever I decide to do in the future, if that helps me or hurts me, Iβm not making decisions down here on what I possibly could do in the future,β McDonnell said.
Labor leader
In his day job, McDonnell helps lead the Omaha Federation of Labor, an umbrella group of local labor unions that make up a major slice of the financial support for the Douglas County Democrats.
He is the former head of the Omaha firefighters union. He dismissed concerns that the county party might lose union support for bucking him. Separately, his legislative political committee gave the Douglas County Democrats $2,000 in 2021-22.
Political observers have questioned whether McDonnell might follow Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine and switch his voter registration to Republican.
He would not answer when asked Thursday whether he might consider running as part of another party β or no party at all.
βThis mayorβs race is nonpartisan,β McDonnell said. βHave I been a registered Democrat since 1984? Yes. Right now if I decide to run for any office, Iβm currently a registered Democrat.β
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