When your parents donate to your political opponent

Kevin Nicholson's parents have donated thousands to his opponent.

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One way for your parents to show they disapprove of your political aspirations is to donate -- to your opponent.

Just months after their son announced his campaign to unseat Baldwin, Donna and Mike Nicholson each gave her $2,700 -- the maximum amount legally permitted per election.

One person who wasn't surprised: Kevin Nicholson.

“My parents have a different worldview than I do, and it is not surprising that they would support a candidate like Tammy Baldwin who shares their perspective,” Nicholson said in a statement provided to ABC News.

Nicholson, a relative newcomer to Republican politics, has been open about his ideological evolution, including his upbringing in a Democratic family and even his past as president of the College Democrats of America.

“I’m a conservative today not because I was born one," Nicholson said, "but because of the experience I earned as a Marine in combat, my experience as a husband and father, my choice to be a Christian, the schools I chose to attend and the decision to pursue the career that I have.”

His mother, Donna Nicholson, has been just as committed to her liberal leanings, making several hundred small and mid-sized donations totaling more than $10,000 to Democratic candidates and PACs over the last 10 years.

And this is not the first time she has supported Baldwin: She donated more than $400 to her between 2012 and 2016, but nowhere near the $5,400 she and her husband donated in December.

Democrats tracking the race closely tell ABC News the political tension between family members -– playing out on the national stage -- raises questions about when and how Kevin Nicholson became a Republican and how he's connected with some of the biggest Republican mega-donors.

All told, super PACs and political nonprofits have spent more than $5.7 million in the Wisconsin Senate race so far this election cycle, all of it for Nicholson's benefit.

Baldwin, however, has been a prolific fundraiser in her own right. The Democratic incumbent raised a total of $2.8 million in the last quarter of 2017 and started this year with nearly seven million in her war chest. Nicholson’s campaign has only collected $801,201 during the same period, leaving him with just a little more than half a million to spend and $40,256 in debt.

ABC News' MaryAlice Parks and John Verhovek contributed to this report.