Trader consensus favors John Thune at 21.5% as next Senate Majority Leader, reflecting Republican leads in key battleground races like Montana, Ohio, and West Virginia, where recent polling averages show GOP challengers ahead amid Democratic vulnerabilities from incumbents' retirements and Biden's low approval. Chuck Schumer trails at 17.5%, pricing a narrow Democratic hold despite defensive math requiring net-zero losses in a 51-49 map. The fragmented field—Lindsey Graham, Tom Cotton, and others at 4.5%—stems from uncertain GOP conference vote dynamics post-election, amplified by potential Trump endorsements or caucus challenges to Thune's whip position. November 5 election outcomes and leadership balloting in early 2025 could decisively separate frontrunners.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jourJohn Thune 22%
Chuck Schumer 18%
Lindsey Graham 4.5%
Cory Booker 5%

John Thune
22%

Chuck Schumer
18%

Lindsey Graham
5%

Cory Booker
5%

Mark Kelly
5%

John Barrasso
5%

Tom Cotton
4%

Brian Schatz
4%

Patty Murray
4%

Steve Daines
4%

Amy Klobuchar
4%
John Thune 22%
Chuck Schumer 18%
Lindsey Graham 4.5%
Cory Booker 5%

John Thune
22%

Chuck Schumer
18%

Lindsey Graham
5%

Cory Booker
5%

Mark Kelly
5%

John Barrasso
5%

Tom Cotton
4%

Brian Schatz
4%

Patty Murray
4%

Steve Daines
4%

Amy Klobuchar
4%
This market will remain open until January 3, 2027, at which point it will resolve based on the first announcement of the next Senate Majority Leader from whichever party holds the majority in the U.S. Senate.
If no Majority is established and a leader is not announced by June 30, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to “Other”.
Marché ouvert : Mar 23, 2026, 7:08 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus favors John Thune at 21.5% as next Senate Majority Leader, reflecting Republican leads in key battleground races like Montana, Ohio, and West Virginia, where recent polling averages show GOP challengers ahead amid Democratic vulnerabilities from incumbents' retirements and Biden's low approval. Chuck Schumer trails at 17.5%, pricing a narrow Democratic hold despite defensive math requiring net-zero losses in a 51-49 map. The fragmented field—Lindsey Graham, Tom Cotton, and others at 4.5%—stems from uncertain GOP conference vote dynamics post-election, amplified by potential Trump endorsements or caucus challenges to Thune's whip position. November 5 election outcomes and leadership balloting in early 2025 could decisively separate frontrunners.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour
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