• About Us
  • Advertise
AltcoinReporter
  • Home
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Blockchain
    • Altcoins
    • DeFi
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Blockchain
    • Altcoins
    • DeFi
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
AltcoinReporter
No Result
View All Result
Home Blockchain

The U.S. Senate Just Banned Itself From Polymarket-Style Betting

The U.S. Senate banned members and staff from prediction markets, citing insider information risks around elections, wars and crises.

Dans Kramer by Dans Kramer
May 2, 2026
in Blockchain
US Senate Prediction Ban

Prediction markets got so spicy that the Senate had to tell itself: please do not gamble on secrets.

The U.S. Senate approved a bipartisan resolution banning senators, officers and staff from participating in prediction markets, including platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket. The rule was adopted by unanimous consent on April 30, meaning no senator objected, and it took effect immediately.

Related articles

Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

June 18, 2026
The Quantum Computing Race Just Started: XRP Ledger, Bitcoin, and Ethereum All Move on Same Day

The Quantum Computing Race Just Started: XRP Ledger, Bitcoin, and Ethereum All Move on Same Day

June 15, 2026

That is a remarkable moment for a market category that used to feel niche. Prediction markets let users trade contracts tied to future events, including elections, policy decisions, economic data, sports, weather and geopolitical outcomes. Now the Senate has decided that its own members and staff should not be allowed to participate.

Crypto prediction markets became so real that politicians had to ban themselves from playing.

The Concern Is Insider Political Information

The ethical issue is obvious.

Senators and their staff often know things before the public does. They may have access to private briefings, legislative timelines, national security information, committee negotiations or internal political strategy. If they trade on prediction markets, they could potentially profit from information ordinary users do not have.

That risk becomes especially uncomfortable when the markets involve elections, wars, economic crises or policy decisions.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer framed it bluntly on the Senate floor, warning that Congress should not become a casino where members gamble on wars, economic crises or elections. Resolution sponsor Sen. Bernie Moreno, a Republican from Ohio, said senators have no business engaging in speculative activities like prediction markets while receiving a taxpayer-funded paycheck.

The funny part is that Congress basically had to write a rule saying: do not monetize insider political information by betting on the outcomes you may influence.

Why This Hits Polymarket and Kalshi

The rule is broader than one company, but the public examples are obvious.

Kalshi is a regulated U.S. prediction market platform, while Polymarket became one of crypto’s most recognizable event-betting venues, especially during high-profile political and geopolitical cycles. Both are part of a wider boom in markets that let traders express views on real-world outcomes.

Business Insider reported that the Senate rule applies to prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket, and that the resolution also urged the House, executive branch and judicial branch to adopt similar restrictions.

That matters because the concern is not only about senators. The same logic applies to many people inside government. A congressional aide, agency official or judicial staffer could also possess sensitive information that might move a prediction market.

If the Senate is the first branch to restrict itself, it may not be the last.

Prediction Markets Are Becoming Financial Infrastructure

The deeper story is that prediction markets are no longer just internet gambling with better charts.

They are increasingly being treated as information markets. Traders use them to price the probability of elections, court rulings, regulatory approvals, wars, macroeconomic outcomes and corporate events. Media outlets quote them. Crypto traders monitor them. Political observers use them as real-time sentiment gauges.

That makes insider access more dangerous.

If a senator knows a vote is about to collapse, or a staffer knows a bill’s markup has been delayed, that information could matter. If a lawmaker has confidential briefings on foreign policy or national security, the risk becomes even more serious.

This is why the Senate’s move is bigger than an ethics tweak. It is an acknowledgment that prediction markets now matter enough to create conflicts of interest.

The Industry Is Already Under Pressure

Prediction markets were already facing political scrutiny before the Senate banned itself.

Business Insider reported that recent insider-trading incidents have intensified criticism of the sector, including cases involving political candidates betting on their own elections and a U.S. Army soldier accused of using classified information to profit on Polymarket. The report noted that Kalshi and Polymarket have both taken steps to detect or restrict improper trading, but critics argue that enforcement does not solve the broader problem.

That is the uncomfortable position for the industry. Prediction markets can be useful because they aggregate information. But the better they become at pricing real-world events, the more attractive they become to people with nonpublic information.

The market’s strength creates the political problem.

This Is Not the Same as a Public Ban

The Senate rule does not ban ordinary users from prediction markets.

It applies to senators, officers and Senate staff. Regular traders can still use legal platforms where available, subject to existing laws, platform rules and jurisdictional restrictions.

But the symbolic impact is still important. When lawmakers ban themselves from an activity, it tells the public that the activity creates special ethical risk. It also gives critics of prediction markets a stronger argument for broader limits.

Some lawmakers are already pushing for tougher restrictions. Business Insider noted that the Senate resolution urged other branches of government to follow, while other legislation seeks to restrict prediction markets more broadly.

The key question is whether this stays as a congressional ethics rule or becomes part of a larger regulatory push.

The Crypto Angle Is About Trust

For crypto, the story matters because prediction markets are one of the sector’s most visible real-world use cases.

Polymarket showed that blockchain-based markets can attract mainstream attention, especially when they track political and global events. The promise is simple: open markets can produce live probability estimates that are sometimes faster and more flexible than polls or expert commentary.

But trust is fragile.

If users believe markets are being moved by insiders, classified information or political operators, the entire product becomes harder to defend. That is especially true when markets involve wars, elections or crises where public officials may have both influence and private knowledge.

Prediction markets can be powerful, but only if users believe the game is not rigged.

The Bottom Line

The U.S. Senate’s prediction-market ban is funny, but it is also serious.

Lawmakers effectively admitted that these markets have become meaningful enough that public officials should not be allowed to trade on them. That is a strange kind of validation. Prediction markets became so real that politicians had to ban themselves from playing.

The next debate will be bigger. Should only lawmakers and staff be restricted, or should prediction markets face broader limits around politics, war and public policy? Should platforms police insider trading themselves, or should regulators impose stricter rules?

For now, one thing is clear: Congress knows prediction markets are not a toy anymore.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

Dans Kramer

Dans Kramer Verified AltcoinReporter Author

Dans is a cryptocurrency writer at AltcoinReporter, focused on market analysis, trading strategies, and exchange reviews. He entered the crypto space in 2022, just after the bull run peak, and...

Read More
Tags: Crypto RegulationKalshiPolymarketPrediction MarketsU.S. Senate

Related Posts

Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

by Salar Salek
June 18, 2026
0

For roughly a century, credit ratings have been the foundational language of fixed-income markets. Investors price bonds, structure portfolios, and...

The Quantum Computing Race Just Started: XRP Ledger, Bitcoin, and Ethereum All Move on Same Day

The Quantum Computing Race Just Started: XRP Ledger, Bitcoin, and Ethereum All Move on Same Day

by Salar Salek
June 15, 2026
0

Quantum computing has been a theoretical threat to blockchain security for years. Researchers debate whether "Q-day," the moment when a...

UFC Just Paid Fighter Bonuses in Trump’s USD1 Stablecoin at a White House Event

UFC Just Paid Fighter Bonuses in Trump’s USD1 Stablecoin at a White House Event

by Salar Salek
June 15, 2026
0

On Sunday June 14, the White House South Lawn was converted into a temporary UFC arena. UFC Freedom 250, organised...

75% of EU Crypto Firms Could Lose Their Licenses on July 1 as MiCA Deadline Approaches

75% of EU Crypto Firms Could Lose Their Licenses on July 1 as MiCA Deadline Approaches

by Salar Salek
June 15, 2026
0

On July 1, 2026, the European Union's grandfathering transition window under the Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation officially ends. After that...

Anthropic’s New Claude Fable 5 Could Make Crypto’s Next Hacker Move at Superhuman Speed

Anthropic’s New Claude Fable 5 Could Make Crypto’s Next Hacker Move at Superhuman Speed

by Salar Salek
June 15, 2026
0

Less than three weeks ago, Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.8 found a vulnerability in Zcash's Orchard shielded pool that had survived...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Solana Alpenglow Upgrade 2026: Launch Date, Features, and What It Means for SOL

Solana Alpenglow Upgrade 2026: Launch Date, Features, and What It Means for SOL

April 18, 2026
Justin Sun vs WLFI: “See You in Court” as Backdoor Token Freeze Row Explodes

Justin Sun vs WLFI: “See You in Court” as Backdoor Token Freeze Row Explodes

April 13, 2026
Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

April 16, 2026
Bitcoin Price Hits Highest Since January as Bulls Eye $85K

Bitcoin Price Hits Highest Since January as Bulls Eye $85K

May 7, 2026
North Korea’s Six-Month Con: How Hackers Stole $286M from Solana’s Drift Protocol

North Korea’s Six-Month Con: How Hackers Stole $286M from Solana’s Drift Protocol

0
Ethereum’s Glamsterdam Upgrade: What It Is and Why It Matters in 2026

Ethereum’s Glamsterdam Upgrade: What It Is and Why It Matters in 2026

0
Bitcoin’s Worst Q1 Since 2018: Can April Turn the Tide?

Bitcoin’s Worst Q1 Since 2018: Can April Turn the Tide?

0
Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

0
Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

Moody’s Just Launched Onchain Credit Ratings on Solana

June 18, 2026
CME Is Suing the CFTC Over Kalshi’s Bitcoin Perpetual Futures Approval

CME Is Suing the CFTC Over Kalshi’s Bitcoin Perpetual Futures Approval

June 18, 2026
Avalanche Sentiment Just Hit Extreme Bearishness as the Token Becomes the Most-Trending Decline

Avalanche Sentiment Just Hit Extreme Bearishness as the Token Becomes the Most-Trending Decline

June 18, 2026
Iran Just Threatened Israel Two Days Before the Peace Deal Signing

Iran Just Threatened Israel Two Days Before the Peace Deal Signing

June 18, 2026

About

AltcoinReporter

AltcoinReporter is an independent crypto news platform built to keep you ahead of the market. We cover everything from Bitcoin and altcoins to DeFi, NFTs, regulation, and emerging blockchain technology.


Our editorial team delivers accurate news, detailed market analysis, and expert insights, with every article written and reviewed by named contributors. We are committed to transparent, independent reporting our readers can trust.

News

  • Altcoins
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • DeFi
  • Ethereum
  • NFT

Reviews

  • Exchanges
  • NFT Marketplaces
  • Wallets

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Write for Us
  • Contact Us

Disclaimer: AltcoinReporter.com provides cryptocurrency news for informational purposes only, not financial, investment, or legal advice. Crypto markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research and consult a financial advisor before investing. We may earn compensation through affiliate links, ads, and sponsored content, which are clearly labelled. AltcoinReporter is not responsible for any financial losses resulting from information on this site.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Ethics
  • Corrections
  • Editorial Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 AltcoinReporter. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Altcoins
    • Bitcoin
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Ethereum
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us

© 2026 AltcoinReporter. All rights reserved.