The UFC middleweight championSean Stricklandis caught up in what critics are calling a paid influence operation, but the bigger question is whether he knew it.
In late May 2026, Sean Strickland posted to X that he had “officially made the switch to Indian Motorcycle,” declaring that riding a Harley meant “indirectly supporting radical ideology that actually pushing radical ideology on children.” The post went viral, drawing thousands of replies across MMA and political circles. What looked at first like another Strickland hot take turned out to be one tile in a far larger mosaic.
Around the same time, a wave of pro-Trump accounts suddenly turned on Harley-Davidson in near-identical fashion. TheBulwark‘s Will Sommer reported that MAGA influencer Priya Patel called the company “fundamentally anti-American,” Hercules actor Kevin Sorbo claimed his friends were abandoning the brand en masse, and conservative meme account “Prison Mitch” told his 100,000-plus followers that Harley was “woke and gay.”
Every single one of those accounts also promoted Indian Motorcycle. The talking points were so uniform, many posts mentioned Indian’s 125th anniversary and the approaching U.S. 250th birthday in the same sentence, that the campaign struggled to look organic.
The situation became hard to ignore when Trump adviser and digital consultant Alex Bruesewitz posted a screenshot of one of the campaign posts and wrote, “Here is an example of a coordinated influencer campaign on X. Copy and paste talking points about a random issue. And yes, foreign countries also pay influencers for certain campaigns like this. We need stronger disclosure laws!”
He deleted the tweet shortly after, and has not addressed it since. EvenNick Adams, the Australian-born conservative influencer whom Trump appointed as Special Presidential Envoy for American Tourism, Exceptionalism, and Values in March 2026, joined in, writing that “Indian Motorcycles are 100% pro-America” and repeating the 125-year figure in multiple posts.
The Harley grievance being amplified was, itself, partly stale. The Milwaukee company had alreadydroppedits DEI department in April 2024, ended minority-supplier spending goals, and cut ties with the Human Rights Campaign, all under pressure from anti-DEI activist Robby Starbuck. By the time Strickland announced his May 2026 switch, Harley had already changed its CEO and wound back the policies that originally drew the boycott calls. The influencers did not appear to mention that part.
Strickland has previous form here. Back in July 2024 he posted a video vowing to sell his Harley, calling then-CEO Jochen Zeitz a “woke zealot” and “industry plant.” He did not mention Indian Motorcycle at that time. The 2026 post named the competitor directly, a notable shift.
In which Sean Strickland is among those accused of taking part in a coordinated fake outrage campaign aimed at Harley-Davidson. 👇https://t.co/QCWPTAnqbE
MMA journalistBen Fowlkespointed his followers toward the Bulwark report on June 2, noting thatStricklandwas “among those accused of taking part in a coordinated fake outrage campaign aimed at Harley-Davidson.”
Source: LowKickMMA.com