Republicans have a House majority after 2026 midterms?
19%
chance

Resolution criteria

This market will resolve to "Yes" if, following the 2026 United States House of Representatives elections, the Republican Party holds at least 218 seats, thereby securing a majority in the House. Conversely, it will resolve to "No" if the Republicans hold fewer than 218 seats. The official election results, as reported by the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, will serve as the primary source for resolution. (ballotpedia.org)

Background

The 2026 midterm elections, scheduled for November 3, 2026, will determine the composition of the 120th United States Congress. All 435 seats in the House of Representatives will be contested. As of June 2025, the Republican Party holds a narrow majority with 220 seats, while the Democratic Party holds 213 seats. (ballotpedia.org)


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  • Update 2025-10-21 (PST) (AI summary of creator comment): The creator assumes all elected Representatives will be sworn in promptly after the election. If circumstances arise where Representatives are not sworn in (e.g., refusal to seat elected members), the creator will address those circumstances individually at the time.

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Does it matter who has House majority? Congress never does anything anyway because of the filibuster in the Senate.

@traders SCOTUS just approved the texas map

@JeromeHPowell makes it less likely to have a majority nice

bruh's gotta subsidize

@realDonaldTrump thats what we have limits for

The limits be limitin’

opened a Ṁ10,850 NO at 99.0% order

@traders $220,000,000 million shares up at a great limit price, lmk if anyone wants to fill 😂 🥀

reposted

Liquidity added!

Does it matter who has House majority? Congress never does anything anyway because of the filibuster in the Senate.

@HankyUSA kind of does bc they can do budget reconciliation or use the nuclear option if desperate

@JeromeHPowell Perhaps I misunderstood what was going on. Aren't they currently failing to do budget reconciliation because of the filibuster? What's the nuclear option? I'm asking sincerely.

@HankyUSA The Senate is strictly majoritarian like the House. The filibuster isn't in the Constitution, its just a tradition in the Senate that is enshrined in its self-made rules. The Senate can vote to change its rules by majority vote at any time, and doing so for the filibuster is considered the "nuclear option". Some legislative options, like budget reconciliation, cannot be blocked by filibuster.

@HankyUSA to add to @Balasar budget reconciliation is a way to pass bills through the Senate without having to deal with the filibuster, is rule saying that if you have a bill that decreases the deficit over the long run, I think usually 10 years then you don’t have to have 60 votes for a bill and you can just pass it with a majority, they’re not using it right now because that’s not really what’s going on, but they did use it to pass the big beautiful bill in a controversial manner

opened a Ṁ5 NO at 30% order

@HankyUSA @JeromeHPowell why is the parent comment pinned?

@MachiNi Only to explain to people why this market matters!!! Many do not believe the Congress, especially the House, is as powerful as it is!

@traders $250,000 no order at 30% by @Joshua

@JeromeHPowell undercutting my damn limit smh

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