Another crack appears in the crumbling foundation of the Democratic Party as Michigan state Representative Karen Whitsett announced she will not seek reelection, citing her inability to reconcile her Christian faith with the increasingly radical anti-religious agenda of today's Democrat Party.
In a bombshell interview with Fox News Digital, the Detroit-area lawmaker didn't mince words about why she's walking away from the party that has abandoned working Americans and people of faith.
"I don't understand how 'Christian' and 'Bible' go together [with] 'Democratic Party,'"
Whitsett's departure represents more than just one politician's crisis of conscience—it's a damning indictment of how far left the Democrats have lurched under their progressive puppet masters. This is the same party that booed God at their national convention and now pushes radical gender ideology on children while attacking parental rights.
The Writing on the Wall
Patriots across America have watched in horror as Democrats wage war on religious liberty, force Christian business owners to violate their beliefs, and promote policies that directly contradict biblical teachings. From their obsession with late-term abortion to their attack on traditional marriage and family values, the modern Democratic Party has become hostile territory for any American who takes their faith seriously.
Whitsett's exodus comes at a time when President Trump's America First agenda is bringing millions of faith-based voters back into the political process. While Democrats alienate believers, Trump's second-term policies are restoring religious freedom and protecting the rights of Christians to live according to their convictions.
The representative's honest assessment exposes what many Christian Democrats have been quietly wrestling with: How can you claim to follow Christ while supporting a party that celebrates everything He stood against?
As more Americans wake up to the Democrats' war on faith and family, expect to see additional defections from politicians who refuse to check their conscience at the door of party loyalty. The question isn't whether more will follow Whitsett's lead—it's how many faithful Americans will finally say 'enough is enough' to the party of moral relativism and anti-Christian bigotry?
