I don't even think Qui-Gon's view of the midichlorians' relationship to the Force was the prevailing Jedi view on the matter. It was established in dialogue that he'd clashed with the Council before.
I think it was more to do with the fact that he took more creative liberties with his role as a Jedi then the vast majority of conservatives would find comfortable. E.g. The kid is too old so why did you bring him in? He acted on his feelings and whims, something most Jedi were told to never do.
The other thing with clones is that force sensitives of the same dna start a feedback loop when together, Luuke was beating on Luke quite easily for that reason, despite the former being c'broths meat puppet.