With the March 31 deadline approaching and no White House announcement or leaked draft of a new executive order imposing restrictions such as banning mail-in ballots, mandating voter ID nationwide, or limiting eligibility in federal elections, traders reflect near-certain consensus at 97.3% for "No." Constitutional limits assign primary election administration authority to states and Congress, as affirmed by federal court injunctions permanently blocking provisions of Trump's March 2025 "Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections" order earlier this year. Recent emphasis has shifted to pressing Senate passage of the SAVE America Act for proof-of-citizenship requirements ahead of 2026 midterms, diminishing prospects for unilateral executive action. Only an unforeseen national security emergency or late-breaking foreign interference revelations could alter this trajectory.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedAny formal executive action which seeks to achieve one of the listed goals will count, regardless of any legal or implementation challenges it may face after issuance. Mere statements from Donald Trump will not alone qualify; a formal executive action to enact policy must be taken. Executive actions which seek to accomplish a listed goal indirectly (e.g. withholding federal funding from states that do not implement a listed policy) will count, provided a formal executive action to enact policy is taken.
An executive action will be considered to seek to mandate voter ID, ban mail-in voting, ban voting machines, or otherwise materially restrict voting methods or eligibility in US federal elections if it seeks to do so either nationally or in any limited context (such as in specific states, areas, or election contexts) for use in United States federal elections.
Qualifying examples of potential executive actions include:
- Executive actions seeking to mandate voter ID nationally, in specific areas of the United States, or only in certain contexts.
- Executive actions seeking to ban mail-in voting broadly or in a limited context, including no-excuse mail-in voting, mandatory mail-in voting, or mail-in voting in certain states or areas.
- Executive actions seeking to ban all voting machines or restricting the use of certain classes of voting machines or of voting machines in specific areas.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the official text of the executive action taken; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Feb 26, 2026, 4:08 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Any formal executive action which seeks to achieve one of the listed goals will count, regardless of any legal or implementation challenges it may face after issuance. Mere statements from Donald Trump will not alone qualify; a formal executive action to enact policy must be taken. Executive actions which seek to accomplish a listed goal indirectly (e.g. withholding federal funding from states that do not implement a listed policy) will count, provided a formal executive action to enact policy is taken.
An executive action will be considered to seek to mandate voter ID, ban mail-in voting, ban voting machines, or otherwise materially restrict voting methods or eligibility in US federal elections if it seeks to do so either nationally or in any limited context (such as in specific states, areas, or election contexts) for use in United States federal elections.
Qualifying examples of potential executive actions include:
- Executive actions seeking to mandate voter ID nationally, in specific areas of the United States, or only in certain contexts.
- Executive actions seeking to ban mail-in voting broadly or in a limited context, including no-excuse mail-in voting, mandatory mail-in voting, or mail-in voting in certain states or areas.
- Executive actions seeking to ban all voting machines or restricting the use of certain classes of voting machines or of voting machines in specific areas.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the official text of the executive action taken; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...With the March 31 deadline approaching and no White House announcement or leaked draft of a new executive order imposing restrictions such as banning mail-in ballots, mandating voter ID nationwide, or limiting eligibility in federal elections, traders reflect near-certain consensus at 97.3% for "No." Constitutional limits assign primary election administration authority to states and Congress, as affirmed by federal court injunctions permanently blocking provisions of Trump's March 2025 "Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections" order earlier this year. Recent emphasis has shifted to pressing Senate passage of the SAVE America Act for proof-of-citizenship requirements ahead of 2026 midterms, diminishing prospects for unilateral executive action. Only an unforeseen national security emergency or late-breaking foreign interference revelations could alter this trajectory.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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