Kalshi and Polymarket Midterm Markets Favor Democratic Sweep With $12.5M Combined Volume – Bitcoin News

Key Takeaways
- Polymarket traders give Democrats a 47% chance of sweeping both chambers in the 2026 midterms, drawing over $7M in volume.
- Kalshi’s $5.5M midterm market mirrors Polymarket odds, with a Democratic sweep leading at 45% probability.
- Trump’s approval sits near 36-37% in May 2026 polls, putting Democrats up D+7 on the generic ballot heading into November.
Prediction Markets Signal Democrats Lead 2026 Midterms as Trump Approval Hits 34%
Polymarket‘s “Balance of Power: 2026 Midterms” market has pulled in $7,038,176 in total trading volume. The leading outcome among traders is a full Democratic sweep of both the House and Senate, priced at 47 cents, reflecting a 47% implied probability. A split Congress with a Republican Senate and Democratic House sits at 34%. A full Republican sweep trails at 19%, while a Democratic Senate paired with a Republican House is considered a near-impossibility at just 1.7%.
Kalshi‘s midterm market, which tracks congressional control as of Feb. 1, 2027, shows nearly identical sentiment with $5,546,744 in volume. Traders there give a Democratic sweep of both chambers a 45% chance. A split favoring a Democratic House and Republican Senate comes in at 31%, while a full Republican sweep sits at 25%. A Republican House paired with a Democratic Senate is priced at just 1.8%.
Both markets resolve based on official congressional records or verified media calls, giving traders a concrete settlement mechanism tied to real election outcomes.
The market odds align with current polling. As of mid-May 2026, President Donald Trump’s job approval averages between 36% and 40% across major trackers. A Quinnipiac University poll conducted May 15-18 placed his approval at 34%, with 58% disapproving. An AP-NORC poll from the same period showed 37% approval and 62% disapproval. The New York Times and Siena College described their May result, also at 37% approve and 59% disapprove, as a second-term low for Trump.
Congressional Republicans are faring no better. A Gallup survey from April 2026 placed Congress at 10% approval and 86% disapproval, near record lows. Democrats lead the generic congressional ballot by roughly five to seven points in recent national averages, with Realclearpolling showing Democrats up approximately seven points and Nate Silver’s tracker near D+6.6 as of mid-May.
A Democratic sweep of both chambers would flip control of Congress six months into the 119th Congress’s final stretch, installing the 120th Congress in January 2027. Historically, the president’s party loses House seats in midterm elections. This pattern has played out in most midterm cycles since World War II.
If Democrats win both chambers, Trump’s legislative options narrow significantly. Reconciliation, the budget process that allowed Republicans to bypass the Senate filibuster with a simple majority, would no longer be available. Democrats could use subpoena power to launch oversight probes, and Senate Democrats could slow or block cabinet and judicial nominees.
Trump would retain authority over executive orders and foreign policy, but funding fights would intensify. Democrats controlling the House would hold the “power of the purse,” setting up potential government shutdown standoffs and debt ceiling leverage battles through the remainder of Trump’s term.
Historical comparisons point to George W. Bush after the 2006 midterms, when Democrats took both chambers and launched oversight on the Iraq War and the financial crisis. A similar dynamic unfolded with Barack Obama after 2010, when a Republican House created two years of gridlock.
The political math for Republicans defending the Senate is difficult. Democrats need a net gain of seats in a map that, while not as favorable as some prior cycles, reflects a national environment running against the party in power.
Traders on both Polymarket and Kalshi are not alone in reading the current environment as favorable for Democrats. Independent voters, who broke toward Republicans in 2024, have turned sharply negative on both Trump and congressional Republicans in recent surveys.
Whether polling trends hold through November remains to be seen. The economy, foreign policy events, and candidate quality will all factor into final results. For now, prediction market traders are putting money on divided government returning to Washington by early 2027.
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