Congressional negotiations over Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding remain stalled amid partisan disputes on spending cuts, border security policy riders, and full-year appropriations bills, keeping trader consensus tightly clustered around early April resolution dates with no outcome exceeding 32%. The slim GOP majorities in the House and Senate, combined with pressure from the House Freedom Caucus demanding deeper reductions and White House priorities under the Trump administration, have prevented a breakthrough since the latest continuing resolution (CR) expired in mid-March. Recent House Appropriations Committee markups advanced partisan versions last week, but filibuster threats and whip count challenges in the Senate signal prolonged haggling. Traders anticipate separation from upcoming floor votes or a short-term CR extension before April 1, though a broader government shutdown looms if no deal materializes.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedBefore April 1 32%
April 9-12 27%
April 17-20 27%
April 13-16 26%
Before April 1
32%
April 1-4
25%
April 5-8
25%
April 9-12
27%
April 13-16
26%
April 17-20
27%
Arpil 21-24
23%
April 25-28
24%
April 29-30
24%
After April 30
25%
Before April 1 32%
April 9-12 27%
April 17-20 27%
April 13-16 26%
Before April 1
32%
April 1-4
25%
April 5-8
25%
April 9-12
27%
April 13-16
26%
April 17-20
27%
Arpil 21-24
23%
April 25-28
24%
April 29-30
24%
After April 30
25%
The end date of the shutdown 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 25, 2026, 9:40 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Congressional negotiations over Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding remain stalled amid partisan disputes on spending cuts, border security policy riders, and full-year appropriations bills, keeping trader consensus tightly clustered around early April resolution dates with no outcome exceeding 32%. The slim GOP majorities in the House and Senate, combined with pressure from the House Freedom Caucus demanding deeper reductions and White House priorities under the Trump administration, have prevented a breakthrough since the latest continuing resolution (CR) expired in mid-March. Recent House Appropriations Committee markups advanced partisan versions last week, but filibuster threats and whip count challenges in the Senate signal prolonged haggling. Traders anticipate separation from upcoming floor votes or a short-term CR extension before April 1, though a broader government shutdown looms if no deal materializes.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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