Republicans hold a 53-47 Senate majority following their 2024 gains, entering the 2026 midterms defending 22 seats to Democrats' 13 in a map favoring GOP incumbents like Susan Collins in Maine and Ted Cruz in Texas, though historical precedents show the president's party averaging Senate losses in midterms. No major retirements or candidate announcements have emerged in the past 30 days, leaving trader consensus shaped by unified Republican trifecta control, Democratic disarray post-election, and early polling signals from battlegrounds like North Carolina and Iowa. Upcoming factors include potential early retirements by spring 2025, state-level redistricting effects, and initial forecasts from aggregators like FiveThirtyEight, which could shift implied probabilities before March 31.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour$78,139 Vol.
↑ 90 %
2%
↑ 80 %
1%
↑ 75%
1%
↑ 70 %
2%
↓ 40 %
5%
$78,139 Vol.
↑ 90 %
2%
↑ 80 %
1%
↑ 75%
1%
↑ 70 %
2%
↓ 40 %
5%
A tie in the number of minutes will not suffice.
The resolution source will be the underlying minute-level price data for 'Republican Party' in the "Which party will win the Senate in 2026?" market, which can be viewed using the bar chart on https://derivative.polymarket.com/index/2026-us-senate-election-republican-odds-over-90-by-march-31 or through the “Resolution” tab with the time set to show the four-hour window. Both interfaces display the same underlying data.
Note: This market will resolve according to the price scoring methodology of derivative.polymarket.com.
Marché ouvert : Dec 5, 2025, 4:00 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Republicans hold a 53-47 Senate majority following their 2024 gains, entering the 2026 midterms defending 22 seats to Democrats' 13 in a map favoring GOP incumbents like Susan Collins in Maine and Ted Cruz in Texas, though historical precedents show the president's party averaging Senate losses in midterms. No major retirements or candidate announcements have emerged in the past 30 days, leaving trader consensus shaped by unified Republican trifecta control, Democratic disarray post-election, and early polling signals from battlegrounds like North Carolina and Iowa. Upcoming factors include potential early retirements by spring 2025, state-level redistricting effects, and initial forecasts from aggregators like FiveThirtyEight, which could shift implied probabilities before March 31.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour
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