Seeing MENSA on a resume would make me wonder if the person had a sense of humor. I think most people (including most intelligent people) regard MENSA as a joke - rightly or wrongly, and I'm always surprised when someone openly admits to being a member.
The usual stereotype is that if someone has a MENSA badge, then they must be able to relate more to puzzles than people. This may be a positive from some managers' perspectives when hiring programmers, but I suspect most managers want a healthy balance of technical skill and ability to hold a conversation. Programmers don't need to be stand-up comedians, but they do need to be able to discuss, accept/give criticism with good humour, be sensitive to the egos of others... not things commonly associated with a "nerd" stereotype that a MENSA membership suggests.
It's a shame, because there's nothing I hate more than people being proud of a lack of intelligence, or proud of an inability to think logically, mathematically, scientifically, etc. which is practically a national disease in the UK. But MENSA has probably never been a productive way to counter that problem; you need to pass a narrow kind of intelligence test to join; and most people, regardless of their analytic intelligence level, have enough social intelligence to know that when someone starts a society like that, it's because they lack something better to do in the evenings. It just invites scorn and ridicule... so, probably a negative on a resume.