Traders' near-certain 99.2% consensus on "No" coup attempt in Venezuela by March 31 stems from President Nicolás Maduro's unchallenged grip on the military and security apparatus, with no verifiable signs of defection, rebellion, or organized plots emerging in the past 30 days. Recent government crackdowns on alleged dissidents and opposition disqualifications, including María Corina Machado's barring from candidacy, have sidelined violent challenges, redirecting focus toward the July presidential election. Absent any escalation signals like mass protests or external intervention, the regime's stability holds firm. Realistic shifts could arise from an unforeseen high-level military mutiny, assassination attempt, or sudden diplomatic rupture, though the imminent deadline minimizes such risks.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$50,473 Vol.
$50,473 Vol.
$50,473 Vol.
$50,473 Vol.
A coup attempt is defined as a coordinated and deliberate effort by military, security forces, or other state actors (or factions thereof) to overthrow or unlawfully seize control of the Venezuelan government or its leadership. Revolutionary actions by non-state forces, isolated protests, or general unrest will not alone qualify.
Claims by the Venezuelan government that a coup attempt was foiled—such as through arrests or disruption of a planned operation—will only count toward a "Yes" resolution if credible independent sources widely report and explicitly characterize the event as a coup attempt. Foiled plots or arrests that occur without any attempted execution of the coup will not qualify.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Jan 6, 2026, 2:38 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A coup attempt is defined as a coordinated and deliberate effort by military, security forces, or other state actors (or factions thereof) to overthrow or unlawfully seize control of the Venezuelan government or its leadership. Revolutionary actions by non-state forces, isolated protests, or general unrest will not alone qualify.
Claims by the Venezuelan government that a coup attempt was foiled—such as through arrests or disruption of a planned operation—will only count toward a "Yes" resolution if credible independent sources widely report and explicitly characterize the event as a coup attempt. Foiled plots or arrests that occur without any attempted execution of the coup will not qualify.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Traders' near-certain 99.2% consensus on "No" coup attempt in Venezuela by March 31 stems from President Nicolás Maduro's unchallenged grip on the military and security apparatus, with no verifiable signs of defection, rebellion, or organized plots emerging in the past 30 days. Recent government crackdowns on alleged dissidents and opposition disqualifications, including María Corina Machado's barring from candidacy, have sidelined violent challenges, redirecting focus toward the July presidential election. Absent any escalation signals like mass protests or external intervention, the regime's stability holds firm. Realistic shifts could arise from an unforeseen high-level military mutiny, assassination attempt, or sudden diplomatic rupture, though the imminent deadline minimizes such risks.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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