Trader consensus on Keir Starmer's phrasing at the next Prime Minister's Questions on October 16 centers on his repetitive attacks on the prior Conservative government's record, such as references to "14 years of chaos," amid intensifying opposition fire from Kemi Badenoch. Recent sessions spotlighted Labour's contentious welfare cuts, including winter fuel payments for pensioners, fueling backbench rebellions and a narrow win on the two-child benefit cap amendment. With Chancellor Rachel Reeves' October 30 budget looming, Starmer faces pressure to defend fiscal discipline. Market odds weigh his rhetorical consistency against fluid parliamentary tensions, underscoring inherent unpredictability in live exchanges.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket · Actualizado$37,611 Vol.
Mr Speaker 20+ times
83%
Mr Speaker 10+ times
98%
Iran 3+ times
87%
Ireland
36%
Scotland
42%
Police
56%
Abuse
33%
Reform
83%
Tory
54%
Epstein
26%
Trump
29%
$37,611 Vol.
Mr Speaker 20+ times
83%
Mr Speaker 10+ times
98%
Iran 3+ times
87%
Ireland
36%
Scotland
42%
Police
56%
Abuse
33%
Reform
83%
Tory
54%
Epstein
26%
Trump
29%
This market will resolve to "Yes" if Keir Starmer says the listed term during the next Prime Minister's Question Time event he participates in. Otherwise, the market will resolve to "No".
Any usage of the term regardless of context will count toward the resolution of this market.
Pluralization/possessive of the term will count toward the resolution of this market, however other forms will NOT count.
Instances where the term is used in a compound word will count regardless of context (e.g. joyful is not a compound word for "joy," however "killjoy" is a compounding of the words "kill" and "joy").
If this market requires a specified number of mentions of a person’s first or last name, a full-name mention will count as one mention (e.g., if a market is about “Joe / Biden 5+ times,” a mention of “Joe Biden” will count once).
AI-generated audio or video will not count toward this market's resolution.
If no such Prime Minister's Question Time event happens by April 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "No". If Starmer ceases to be Prime Minister for any length of time by April 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "No".
This market is explicitly about scheduled events featuring Keir Starmer titled "Prime Minister's Question Time" (https://www.parallelparliament.co.uk/mp/keir-starmer/dept/cabinet-office/calendar). Speeches, events, or comments that occur outside of named, scheduled events will not qualify toward this market's resolution. If the event contains a Q&A, it will count toward the resolution of this market.
The resolution source will be video of the events. Only remarks which are broadcast or streamed live will count toward this market's resolution.
Mercado abierto: Mar 18, 2026, 5:15 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Keir Starmer's phrasing at the next Prime Minister's Questions on October 16 centers on his repetitive attacks on the prior Conservative government's record, such as references to "14 years of chaos," amid intensifying opposition fire from Kemi Badenoch. Recent sessions spotlighted Labour's contentious welfare cuts, including winter fuel payments for pensioners, fueling backbench rebellions and a narrow win on the two-child benefit cap amendment. With Chancellor Rachel Reeves' October 30 budget looming, Starmer faces pressure to defend fiscal discipline. Market odds weigh his rhetorical consistency against fluid parliamentary tensions, underscoring inherent unpredictability in live exchanges.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket · Actualizado
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