The partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), triggered by Congress's failure to pass FY2026 appropriations on February 14 and now the longest in U.S. history at over 45 days, reflects a partisan standoff over funding levels, immigration enforcement, and policy riders. House Republicans advanced a 60-day continuing resolution last week to fund DHS through May 22, but Senate Democrats rejected it as "dead on arrival," insisting on full-year appropriations without concessions. With both chambers in recess until April 13, traders price in extended duration amid airport delays from unpaid TSA staff and security concerns. Post-recess negotiations, potential bipartisan talks, or executive actions could shorten it, though historical shutdown patterns favor prolonged brinkmanship.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedHow long will the DHS shutdown last?
How long will the DHS shutdown last?
$1,198,352 Vol.
$1,198,352 Vol.
48+ days
100%
52+ days
98%
60+ days
90%
70+ days
53%
80+ days
45%
90+ days
24%
$1,198,352 Vol.
$1,198,352 Vol.
48+ days
100%
52+ days
98%
60+ days
90%
70+ days
53%
80+ days
45%
90+ days
24%
The end date of the shut down will be determined by the date on which the funding bill required to reopen the Department of Homeland Security is signed by the President or otherwise enacted. The announcement of an impending reopen will not qualify.
The resolution sources for this market will be information from official U.S. Government sources and a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 20, 2026, 4:54 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The end date of the shut down will be determined by the date on which the funding bill required to reopen the Department of Homeland Security is signed by the President or otherwise enacted. The announcement of an impending reopen will not qualify.
The resolution sources for this market will be information from official U.S. Government sources and a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), triggered by Congress's failure to pass FY2026 appropriations on February 14 and now the longest in U.S. history at over 45 days, reflects a partisan standoff over funding levels, immigration enforcement, and policy riders. House Republicans advanced a 60-day continuing resolution last week to fund DHS through May 22, but Senate Democrats rejected it as "dead on arrival," insisting on full-year appropriations without concessions. With both chambers in recess until April 13, traders price in extended duration amid airport delays from unpaid TSA staff and security concerns. Post-recess negotiations, potential bipartisan talks, or executive actions could shorten it, though historical shutdown patterns favor prolonged brinkmanship.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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