Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects near-certain 99.5% implied probability for "No" on Congress passing any tariffs by March 31, driven by the absence of active legislation in the 119th Congress and President Trump's reliance on executive actions like Section 232 and IEEPA for recent steel, aluminum, and China tariff hikes announced this month. Partisan gridlock has prioritized budget reconciliation and debt ceiling talks over trade policy, with no tariff bills advancing from committees amid a compressed calendar—House recesses start late March and Senate focuses on confirmations. Tail risks include a surprise bipartisan deal or national security trigger fast-tracking a bill, though such scenarios face steep procedural hurdles pre-deadline.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · AktualisiertJa
Ja
A bill, measure or resolution will be considered to “seek to create a tariff” if it explicitly calls for or orders the imposition of any import tax or duty on any category of goods from any country or region. Category-specific tariffs, general tariffs on countries, or blanket global tariffs will all qualify. The delegation of tariff powers to other government authorities (e.g. the President) without calling for specific tariffs to be imposed, trade restrictions which do not impose an import tax or duty, or tariffs imposed under existing executive authority without new passage by both chambers of Congress will not qualify.
A measure amended by either chamber will only qualify if the amended version is subsequently passed by both chambers in identical form.
The resolution source will be official congressional voting records and a consensus of credible reporting.
Markt eröffnet: Feb 20, 2026, 1:46 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A bill, measure or resolution will be considered to “seek to create a tariff” if it explicitly calls for or orders the imposition of any import tax or duty on any category of goods from any country or region. Category-specific tariffs, general tariffs on countries, or blanket global tariffs will all qualify. The delegation of tariff powers to other government authorities (e.g. the President) without calling for specific tariffs to be imposed, trade restrictions which do not impose an import tax or duty, or tariffs imposed under existing executive authority without new passage by both chambers of Congress will not qualify.
A measure amended by either chamber will only qualify if the amended version is subsequently passed by both chambers in identical form.
The resolution source will be official congressional voting records and a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects near-certain 99.5% implied probability for "No" on Congress passing any tariffs by March 31, driven by the absence of active legislation in the 119th Congress and President Trump's reliance on executive actions like Section 232 and IEEPA for recent steel, aluminum, and China tariff hikes announced this month. Partisan gridlock has prioritized budget reconciliation and debt ceiling talks over trade policy, with no tariff bills advancing from committees amid a compressed calendar—House recesses start late March and Senate focuses on confirmations. Tail risks include a surprise bipartisan deal or national security trigger fast-tracking a bill, though such scenarios face steep procedural hurdles pre-deadline.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · Aktualisiert
Vorsicht bei externen Links.
Vorsicht bei externen Links.
Häufig gestellte Fragen