A powerful senator walks into the chamber knowing his entire career could end in days.
Colleagues avert their eyes. Staffers relive a party they wish they’d never attended.
An off-color “joke.” A denied touch that maybe wasn’t. A handwritten Bible note. A state’s first-ever expul
In Nebraska’s marble halls, the clash is no longer just about one man’s behavior,
but about what a legislature is willing to tolerate in its own ranks.
Dan McKeon insists he is a sinner like everyone else, that his words were a misunderstanding,
his touch nonsexual, his faith sincere. Yet the staffer’s account, the outside investigation,
and his shifting explanations have left many lawmakers staring at a different truth: power magnifies even “jokes” into something heavier.
As the Executive Board prepares its hearing and senators count toward the 33 votes needed to expel him,
the chamber is being forced to choose between precedent and accountability.
If McKeon survives, critics will say the bar for consequences remains impossibly high.
If he falls, Nebraska’s first expulsion will echo far beyond Lincoln,
a warning shot in an era when private conduct can erase public careers overnight.