| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanya Miller | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Bob Trammell | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which candidate will become the Democratic nominee for Georgia Attorney General; it matters because the nominee will shape the party’s legal priorities and competitiveness in the statewide general election. Market trading reflects collective expectations about the primary process and candidate viability.
The Attorney General is the state’s chief legal officer, responsible for litigation, legal opinions, and law-enforcement priorities that can affect state policy and national litigation. Nomination battles for this office often hinge on name recognition, legal credentials, and the ability to mobilize voters across diverse Georgia electorates. Georgia’s recent political environment has been competitive, making the Democratic nomination strategically important for both parties.
Market odds represent traders’ aggregated beliefs about who will be the official Democratic nominee and can shift as new information arrives; they are not guarantees but a summary of current sentiment and available information. Watch how odds move around key events (debt of endorsements, fundraising disclosures, primary and runoff dates) rather than treating a single snapshot as definitive.
The market resolves based on the official certification of the Democratic nominee under Georgia election law; resolution generally occurs after the state certifies primary or runoff results or after a party processes an official nomination, not when media outlets first report results.
If Georgia’s nomination process requires a runoff between the top two primary finishers, the market outcome depends on the officially certified winner of that runoff; traders typically update positions as runoff matchups and turnout expectations become clear.
If a candidate withdraws or is disqualified before official certification, the market will reflect the changed field and may update prices or be settled according to the platform’s rules and the state’s official candidate list; if a certified nominee later withdraws, resolution follows official replacement procedures under state or party rules.
Key developments include major endorsements, fundraising reports, debate performances, legal events tied to candidates, significant polling changes, and administrative updates to primary or runoff dates and ballot access.
No — this market specifically tracks who becomes the Democratic nominee. General election competitiveness depends on the nominee, the Republican nominee, general-election dynamics, and turnout, which are separate considerations after the nomination is decided.