Nebraska Lawmakers Weigh Historic Expulsion Over Harassment Claims

Nebraska Lawmakers Weigh Historic Expulsion Over Harassment Claims

> At a Glance

> – Nebraska senators may expel Sen. Dan McKeon over alleged inappropriate conduct

> – Report finds he told a staffer to “get laid” and touched her inappropriately at a party

> – If expelled, McKeon would be the first in state history and 57th nationwide since 2017

> > Why it matters: The vote tests Nebraska’s zero-tolerance stance on workplace misconduct in the #MeToo era.

Nebraska lawmakers opened their 2026 session with an explosive motion: whether to expel Sen. Dan McKeon after an outside investigation found he violated the legislature’s workplace harassment policy. The 59-year-old Republican, first elected in 2014, faces removal over incidents at a May 29 party last year.

What the Investigation Found

The outside law-firm report, released Wednesday, says McKeon joked that a female staffer should “get laid” on vacation and then patted her buttocks at the Lincoln Country Club event. McKeon later claimed he was referencing a Hawaiian lei, but the staffer wasn’t traveling to Hawaii.

Key findings:

  • McKeon admitted he “may have” touched her “rear end” but denied sexual intent
  • He was told to avoid staff-only socials yet attended another party the same night
  • A follow-up text called the complainant “difficult to work with”

Possible Consequences

The Legislature’s Executive Board will hold a Monday hearing on the expulsion resolution. If advanced, the full body could vote as soon as Tuesday, needing 33 votes to remove McKeon.

Outcome Historical Context
Expulsion Would be Nebraska’s first ever
Resignation 56 state lawmakers have resigned or been expelled nationwide since 2017
Other penalty Censure or reprimand still possible

Despite calls from Gov. Jim Pillen and GOP leaders to resign, McKeon refuses to quit, saying, “It is what it is. I’m not going to cry about it.”

senator

Key Takeaways

  • McKeon faces a misdemeanor disturbing-the-peace charge and has pleaded not guilty
  • At least 156 state legislators nationwide have faced sexual-misconduct allegations since 2017
  • Nebraska’s officially nonpartisan Legislature now sets a national precedent on accountability

The vote next week will decide whether Nebraska joins the growing list of states forcing lawmakers out over verified harassment claims.

Author

  • Megan L. Whitfield is a Senior Reporter at News of Fort Worth, covering education policy, municipal finance, and neighborhood development. Known for data-driven accountability reporting, she explains how public budgets and school decisions shape Fort Worth’s communities.

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