Former NASA astronaut Mark Kelly has won re-election to the United States Senate, multiple media outlets are projecting.
Mark Kelly, an incumbent Democratic senator from Arizona, defeated his Republican opponent Blake Masters, according to The Associated Press (opens in new tab), NBC News (opens in new tab) and other organizations.
As of Friday night (Nov. 11), Kelly was ahead by more than 120,000 votes with an estimated 394,000 votes left to count,, according to NBC News, which sees no path to victory for Masters at this point.
Kelly celebrated the news via Twitter, posting a thank-you (opens in new tab) to the citizens of Arizona.
Related: Biography of former NASA astronaut Mark Kelly
Thank you, Arizona. pic.twitter.com/MKmCOGqsZxNovember 12, 2022 See more
Kelly was first elected to the Senate in 2020, becoming just the fourth former astronaut ever to win a seat in Congress. In that race, Kelly defeated Republican Martha McSally, whom Arizona’s governor had appointed after longtime senator John McCain died in 2018.
Kelly joined NASA as an astronaut candidate in 1996, in the same class as his twin brother, Scott. Mark Kelly spent a total of 54 days off Earth across four space shuttle missions, the last of which flew in 2011.
He retired from NASA that same year but played a key role in Scott’s epic 11-month mission aboard the International Space Station, which ran from late March 2015 to early March 2016. Scientists collected medical and physiological data from both twins — one in space and one on the ground — throughout the mission, in an attempt to quantify the impacts of long-duration spaceflight on the human body.
Scott Kelly retired from NASA in April 2016, shortly after the mission wrapped up.
Mark Kelly is married to former Arizona Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, who survived an assassination attempt during an event with constituents in January 2011. Both Kelly and Giffords are strong advocates for gun control.