| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic party | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Republican party | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which candidate will win the Delaware Attorney General race; it matters because the Attorney General sets prosecution priorities, shapes consumer protection and civil litigation strategy, and influences statewide legal policy. Market interest reflects how traders incorporate polling, fundraising, and news into an aggregate signal about the likely winner.
The Delaware Attorney General is a statewide elected office that handles criminal prosecutions, civil litigation on behalf of the state, consumer protection, and multi-state legal actions. In recent cycles, party control, incumbency, and statewide turnout patterns have been important drivers of outcomes; local issues such as crime policy, opioid litigation, and consumer protection suits also shape campaigns. This market closes on a date set by the platform (currently listed as TBD) and will resolve based on official results and the platform’s resolution rules.
Prediction market odds synthesize public information — polling, fundraising, endorsements, and news — into a single, tradable signal about which of the two listed candidates traders expect will win. Use them as a dynamic measure of market consensus, not as a substitute for official results or certified outcomes.
Resolution will follow the platform’s published rules and will rely on the official Delaware election results as certified by the state. Because the market lists a close date as TBD, traders should check the market page and platform rules for the official closing and resolution timeline.
Each outcome corresponds to one of the two candidates listed on the market page for the Delaware Attorney General race; the winning outcome is the candidate who is officially declared and certified the statewide winner by Delaware election authorities.
Markets typically wait for an official, certified result before settling. If a recount or legal dispute delays certification, the platform’s rules determine when and how the market resolves—often by waiting for final certification or an authoritative legal decision.
Recent history shows that incumbency, party organization, and statewide turnout trends matter in Delaware elections; statewide offices have at times favored one party depending on the cycle, and high-profile litigation (e.g., opioid settlements) can elevate the office’s visibility and affect voter preferences.
Major campaign events such as high-profile endorsements, significant fundraising reports, credible polling releases, breaking news about candidates (scandals or legal issues), and changes in voter turnout expectations are the kinds of developments that typically shift trader sentiment in this market.