Mark Kelly and his wife were cheering for a foreign country, wearing their jersey. There are many Mexican voters in Arizona. It didn’t go over well with Republican voters who would like to see our representatives less globalist and more American.
What do you think?
They gotta win over those illegal alien voters who are definitely not voting 😉
— Tomi Lahren (@TomiLahren) July 6, 2026
It makes sense. Sen Kelly meets with Mexico’s representative for “Mexico abroad,” who actually LIVES in the USA. Yes, we have a member of Mexico’s legislature that LIVES IN THE USA & MEETS WITH OUR GOVERNMENT, but y’all are distracted by Israel. 🙄 pic.twitter.com/LubKXzfoVU
— ModSquad anti-communist. (@Designsage) July 6, 2026
He has creepy friends.
I care much more about him taking money from this terrorist. pic.twitter.com/AcI93e6ZOd
— Paul Gray (@Paulfgray4) July 6, 2026
Modern Democratic Party: wear another country’s jersey and post a photo of yourself taking a photo of yourself. https://t.co/UM8t7mwWum
— Scott Jennings (@ScottJenningsKY) July 6, 2026
He had that China-funded balloon company
Before becoming a senator, Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., was not only an astronaut but also co-founded a company that specializes in spy balloons, which was funded in part by a venture capitalist in China with close ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
Tucson-based World View, co-founded by now-U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly in 2012, received venture capital from Tencent — one of China’s largest tech companies — in both 2013 and 2016.
Tencent, like most Chinese tech giants, has close ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
World View president and CEO Ryan Hartman told The Arizona Republic in 2020 that Tencent had “zero access, zero input and zero control” over the company.
Still, they were in business with a Chinese Communist Party that sends what looks like spy balloons over the United States.
He stopped working for them in 2019, right before his Senate run, but kept his stock.
