President-elect Trump's lack of any official statements or transition team signals about declaring a national emergency on election interference remains the primary driver behind the 69% "No" odds, reflecting trader consensus that no such executive action is imminent. With inauguration not until January 20, 2025, Trump lacks authority to act now, and recent focus has centered on cabinet nominations, agency reforms like DOGE, and policy priorities such as border security rather than revisiting 2020 election disputes. Absent concrete announcements or legislative momentum, traders price in legal hurdles and political costs, viewing speculation on social media as unsubstantiated hype amid stable market sentiment.
Экспериментальная сводка, созданная ИИ на основе данных Polymarket · ОбновленоДа
$130,483 Объем
$130,483 Объем
Да
$130,483 Объем
$130,483 Объем
A qualifying declaration must include formal language stating that a national emergency exists and must be issued under the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. § 1621 et seq.). The declaration must explicitly reference interference in U.S. elections, election processes, election systems, voting procedures, ballots, or voting machines as the basis for the emergency. Statements, speeches, social media posts, draft orders, executive orders that do not formally declare a national emergency under the National Emergencies Act, or other actions that merely reference election interference without declaring a national emergency will not qualify.
Renewals or extensions of previously existing national emergencies will not qualify unless the text is materially modified to explicitly relate to election interference.
The primary resolution source will be the Federal Register and official White House publications, however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Открытие рынка: Feb 26, 2026, 4:29 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A qualifying declaration must include formal language stating that a national emergency exists and must be issued under the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. § 1621 et seq.). The declaration must explicitly reference interference in U.S. elections, election processes, election systems, voting procedures, ballots, or voting machines as the basis for the emergency. Statements, speeches, social media posts, draft orders, executive orders that do not formally declare a national emergency under the National Emergencies Act, or other actions that merely reference election interference without declaring a national emergency will not qualify.
Renewals or extensions of previously existing national emergencies will not qualify unless the text is materially modified to explicitly relate to election interference.
The primary resolution source will be the Federal Register and official White House publications, however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...President-elect Trump's lack of any official statements or transition team signals about declaring a national emergency on election interference remains the primary driver behind the 69% "No" odds, reflecting trader consensus that no such executive action is imminent. With inauguration not until January 20, 2025, Trump lacks authority to act now, and recent focus has centered on cabinet nominations, agency reforms like DOGE, and policy priorities such as border security rather than revisiting 2020 election disputes. Absent concrete announcements or legislative momentum, traders price in legal hurdles and political costs, viewing speculation on social media as unsubstantiated hype amid stable market sentiment.
Экспериментальная сводка, созданная ИИ на основе данных Polymarket · Обновлено
Не доверяй внешним ссылкам.
Не доверяй внешним ссылкам.
Часто задаваемые вопросы