How Prediction Markets Bring Real Independence to Political Commentary

How Prediction Markets Bring Real Independence to Political Commentary
Image generated by IVN staff.
Published: 04 Dec, 2025
4 min read

Does a loudmouth in your family believe that AOC is on track to be the 2028 Democratic nominee or that Trump will be impeached by Christmas? Prediction markets tell very different stories. 

Prediction market platform Kalshi gives AOC a 9% chance of being the Democratic presidential nominee, well behind Gavin Newsom’s 37%. As for a third Trump impeachment, he only has a 1% chance of being impeached by New Year’s Day 2026, with odds rising to 56% by Jan. 1, 2028. 

Betting on Democracy: Prediction Markets, Polls, and the Independent Voter Uprising

Instead of rewarding the loudest voices, prediction markets give clear, impartial pictures of the likely futures before us. They cut through the noise of online political commentary and cable news punditry by forcing people to put their money where their mouths are. Finally, they offer ways to hedge against the financial risks of political outcomes that may be difficult to predict through polling alone. 

Reading the News Through Market Odds 

On a prediction market platform, traders can bet on whether an event will happen. The value of “Yes” or “No” contracts reflect the probability that an event will or won’t occur. For example, a 70-cent “No” contract implies a 70% chance of that event not happening. 

Take some odds for Monday, Dec. 1: 

People familiar with the details of these stories may find that the odds make fine sense. But for those who lack the bandwidth to follow them–along with every other consequential story pouring out of the Trump White House–accurate crowd-sourced forecasts offer a snapshot of what’s coming next.  

Wise Crowds and Skin in the Game

Prediction markets can arrive at a forecast because of two related incentives: the wisdom of crowds and skin in the game. 

The wisdom of crowds is more than getting a group together and throwing out a guess. Anyone who has worked a corporate job has seen groupthink and its idiocy in action. In contrast, a wise crowd is: 

  • Diverse - Errors correct each other until a market consensus is reached  
  • Decentralized - Users apply local knowledge instead of having a consensus handed down from on high  
  • Independent - Forecasters make their own judgments instead of copying each other 
  • Aggregated - All the viewpoints get boiled down to a single forecast

Large-scale prediction markets draw enough traders to cancel the most extreme voices out and arrive at a reasonable likelihood of an event occurring. That scale is crucial to capturing local insights that may not be obvious to pollsters. 

IVP Donate

For example, a Polymarket user made over $80 million on Trump’s 2024 victory by commissioning his own private polls showing support for Trump that pollsters weren’t capturing. Respondents to his polls reported many of their neighbors were likely to vote for Trump, revealing the “shy Trump voter” effect that has led the last three cycles of presidential polling to underestimate his chances of winning. 

Sharp traders devour any information they can find to find edges. They’re the ones with skin in the game, meaning they lose their own money if they’re wrong. No one else can take the fall if an eight-figure bet goes the wrong way.  

What About the Gambling?

CFTC-regulated prediction market platform Kalshi has prided itself on bringing new hedging and forecasting instruments to the public. Traders can use event contracts as insurance against most real-world events, from rainfall amounts to political and economic outcomes. 

Users can also use event contracts to gamble, as many do on increasingly popular sports contracts. Sports comprised 90% of Kalshi’s trade volume in September 2025, and several prediction market platforms and brokers are in litigation with state gaming commissions over sports contracts, which compete with state-regulated sportsbooks.      

Most of the users trading in derivatives markets are speculators–gamblers by any other name. However, prediction market platforms also offer interest payments on qualifying positions, hedging opportunities, and forecasts that non-traders can use without trading themselves.

That is the trade-off of widespread retail access to event contracts. The gambler’s willingness to trade a contract makes another user’s ability to hedge possible. If many gamblers accept contracts at certain prices, that price becomes the forecast that non-traders and traders alike can glean insight from.   

The hedging utility may be far lower and forecasting less valuable in sports markets than in other categories. But as the court battles over sports contracts unfold, political event contracts continue to offer real-time objective insights that digital punditry fails to match. 

Even mainstream news sources are turning to prediction markets to complement political coverage. Kalshi announced a partnership with CNN on Dec. 1, shortly after Time Magazine announced a prediction market venture with Galactic. 

Let Us Vote : Sign Now!

Prediction markets are more than financial exchanges or speculative platforms. They’re checks on punditry in a media environment overrun with it.  

In this article

You Might Also Like

buttons with party symbols on them and an american flag button in the center.
Americans Hate Gerrymandering. This New Party Hack Can Defeat It
In 2024, measures for statewide election reform failed in all eight states where they were on the ballot. Despite growing support for competitive elections, these initiatives unraveled as the result of pushback from the political establishment. The major parties only agree to oppose any measure impeding their incumbents' re-election. ...
11 Dec, 2025
-
3 min read
Is Politico's Gerrymandering Poll and Analysis Misleading?
Is Politico's Gerrymandering Poll and Analysis Misleading?
Politico published a story last week under the headline “Poll: Americans don’t just tolerate gerrymandering — they back it.” Still, a close review of the data shows the poll does not support that conclusion. The poll shows that Americans overwhelmingly prefer either an independent redistricting process or a voter-approved process — not partisan map-drawing without voter approval. This is the exact opposite of the narrative Politico’s headline and article promoted....
25 Nov, 2025
-
5 min read
storm clouds over the white house
Cabinet on the Clock: How Four Top Officials Can Win Back Public Trust
The honeymoon is over. A new national survey from the Independent Center reveals that a plurality of American adults and registered voters believe key cabinet officials should be replaced—a striking rebuke of the administration’s current direction....
13 Nov, 2025
-
3 min read
Why Mathematicians Love Ranked Choice Voting
Why Mathematicians Love Ranked Choice Voting
The Institute for Mathematics and Democracy (IMD) has released what may be the most comprehensive empirical study of ranked choice voting ever conducted. The 66-page report analyzes nearly 4,000 real-world ranked ballot elections, including some 2,000 political elections, and more than 60 million simulated ones to test how different voting methods perform....
11 Dec, 2025
-
4 min read
California flag
Quirk Silva’s Exit Sparks a High-Profile Orange County Clash, Where Independent Voters Control the Math
California’s 67th Assembly District stretches across parts of Orange and Los Angeles counties, connecting some of the region’s most dynamic and diverse suburban communities. It includes the entire cities of Cerritos, La Palma, Hawaiian Gardens, Artesia, Buena Park, and Cypress, as well as portions of Fullerton and Anaheim....
18 Dec, 2025
-
6 min read
Donald Trump
Trump Signs Order to Reclassify Cannabis to Schedule III
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump announced Thursday that his administration will officially move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act, a decision that marks the most significant change to U.S. drug policy since the early 1970s....
18 Dec, 2025
-
2 min read