Trader consensus on Polymarket favors Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as the frontrunner to visit Venezuela by March 31, with implied probabilities reflecting Brazil's active mediation role in the post-election crisis following Nicolás Maduro's disputed July 2024 victory. Key drivers include Lula's repeated calls for dialogue, his October hosting of Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil, and Colombia's Gustavo Petro's precedent-setting trip that eased some regional tensions. Argentina's Javier Milei trails due to his vocal anti-Maduro stance. Upcoming catalysts like potential CELAC summits or OAS resolutions could shift dynamics, though no visits are officially scheduled amid ongoing U.S. sanctions and opposition exile pressures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$14,570 Vol.
Richard Grenell
47%
Dinorah Figuera
46%
Karoline Leavitt
31%
Pete Hegseth
25%
Dan Caine
25%
Edmundo González Urrutia
12%
Emmanuel Macron
11%
Keir Starmer
11%
JD Vance
9%
Marco Rubio
7%
María Corina Machado
5%
Jared Kushner
12%
Donald Trump
2%
Larry Fink
31%
Charles Myers
50%
Nicolás Maduro
33%
Jamie Dimon
49%
$14,570 Vol.
Richard Grenell
47%
Dinorah Figuera
46%
Karoline Leavitt
31%
Pete Hegseth
25%
Dan Caine
25%
Edmundo González Urrutia
12%
Emmanuel Macron
11%
Keir Starmer
11%
JD Vance
9%
Marco Rubio
7%
María Corina Machado
5%
Jared Kushner
12%
Donald Trump
2%
Larry Fink
31%
Charles Myers
50%
Nicolás Maduro
33%
Jamie Dimon
49%
For the purpose of this market, a "visit" is defined as the individual physically entering the terrestrial territory of Venezuela. Whether or not the individual enters Venezuelan airspace or maritime territory during the timeframe of this market will have no bearing on a positive resolution.
The primary resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Jan 4, 2026, 3:14 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket favors Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as the frontrunner to visit Venezuela by March 31, with implied probabilities reflecting Brazil's active mediation role in the post-election crisis following Nicolás Maduro's disputed July 2024 victory. Key drivers include Lula's repeated calls for dialogue, his October hosting of Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil, and Colombia's Gustavo Petro's precedent-setting trip that eased some regional tensions. Argentina's Javier Milei trails due to his vocal anti-Maduro stance. Upcoming catalysts like potential CELAC summits or OAS resolutions could shift dynamics, though no visits are officially scheduled amid ongoing U.S. sanctions and opposition exile pressures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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