Trader consensus on Polymarket heavily favors Hungary's Viktor Orbán as the next leader out of power before 2027, priced at 38%, driven by escalating EU rule-of-law disputes freezing billions in recovery funds and Fidesz's slippage in June 2024 European Parliament elections, where opposition unity boosted challengers ahead of 2026 national polls. Cuba's Miguel Díaz-Canel ranks second at 18.5%, amid chronic blackouts, food shortages, and mass exodus fueling rare public dissent against the one-party system. Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu at 8.3% reflects Gaza war prolongation, coalition rifts post Benny Gantz's June resignation, and looming corruption trials. Keir Starmer's 5.3% ties to UK Labour's early budget controversies and by-election pressures, underscoring traders' focus on near-term instability catalysts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedNext leader out of power before 2027?
Next leader out of power before 2027?
Orbán - Hungary PM 38%
Díaz-Canel - Cuba President 18%
Netanyahu - Israel PM 8.3%
Starmer - UK PM 5.3%
$1,898,661 Vol.
$1,898,661 Vol.
Orbán - Hungary PM
38%
Díaz-Canel - Cuba President
18%
Netanyahu - Israel PM
8%
Starmer - UK PM
5%
Putin - Russia President
2%
Takaichi - Japan PM
2%
None before 2027
2%
Zelenskyy - Ukraine President
2%
Trump - USA President
2%
Macron - France President
1%
Xi - General Secretary of the CCP
1%
Abbas - President of Palestine
1%
Petro - Colombia President
1%
Erdoğan - Türkiye President
1%
Milei - Argentina President
1%
Sánchez - Spanish PM
1%
Sheinbaum - Mexico President
1%
Rodríguez - Venezuela Acting President
1%
Newsom - California Governor
1%
Lula da Silva - Brazil President
1%
Kim - Supreme Leader of North Korea
1%
Lecornu - France PM
1%
Albanese - Australia PM
<1%
Merz - German Chancellor
<1%
al-Sharaa - Syria President
<1%
Orbán - Hungary PM 38%
Díaz-Canel - Cuba President 18%
Netanyahu - Israel PM 8.3%
Starmer - UK PM 5.3%
$1,898,661 Vol.
$1,898,661 Vol.
Orbán - Hungary PM
38%
Díaz-Canel - Cuba President
18%
Netanyahu - Israel PM
8%
Starmer - UK PM
5%
Putin - Russia President
2%
Takaichi - Japan PM
2%
None before 2027
2%
Zelenskyy - Ukraine President
2%
Trump - USA President
2%
Macron - France President
1%
Xi - General Secretary of the CCP
1%
Abbas - President of Palestine
1%
Petro - Colombia President
1%
Erdoğan - Türkiye President
1%
Milei - Argentina President
1%
Sánchez - Spanish PM
1%
Sheinbaum - Mexico President
1%
Rodríguez - Venezuela Acting President
1%
Newsom - California Governor
1%
Lula da Silva - Brazil President
1%
Kim - Supreme Leader of North Korea
1%
Lecornu - France PM
1%
Albanese - Australia PM
<1%
Merz - German Chancellor
<1%
al-Sharaa - Syria President
<1%
An announcement of a resignation/removal, or a scheduled departure from office due to the outcome of an election, will not alone qualify.
Only permanent removal from office will qualify for resolution. Temporary removals, such as impeachment suspensions (e.g., Yoon Suk Yeol's recent impeachment), temporary invocation of the 25th Amendment, or any similar provisional transfers of power, will not count.
Additionally, if an individual continues in a caretaker or interim role (e.g., Gabriel Attal remaining as caretaker Prime Minister of France), they will not be considered to have ceased occupying the office for the purposes of this market.
If this criterion has not been met for any of the listed individuals by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to “None before 2027”. No additional individuals will be added to this market after its creation.
The resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 2, 2026, 7:09 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus on Polymarket heavily favors Hungary's Viktor Orbán as the next leader out of power before 2027, priced at 38%, driven by escalating EU rule-of-law disputes freezing billions in recovery funds and Fidesz's slippage in June 2024 European Parliament elections, where opposition unity boosted challengers ahead of 2026 national polls. Cuba's Miguel Díaz-Canel ranks second at 18.5%, amid chronic blackouts, food shortages, and mass exodus fueling rare public dissent against the one-party system. Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu at 8.3% reflects Gaza war prolongation, coalition rifts post Benny Gantz's June resignation, and looming corruption trials. Keir Starmer's 5.3% ties to UK Labour's early budget controversies and by-election pressures, underscoring traders' focus on near-term instability catalysts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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