Examining Donald Trump's odds to win the 2024 US Presidential Election on Nov. 5 against Democratic nominee Kamala Harris.
In the latest presidential election predictions and odds, Donald Trump is the biggest favorite he has been in months as we are just 16 days until the presidential election.
Trump was underestimated in 2016 and 2020. Though imperfect,betting marketsdo help cut through the noise and allow some aggregation of the information at hand in terms of what people expect. In these, Trump has been rising, reaching a odds greater than 63 percent. That sounds about right. Th...
Those chances to win are based on election odds of -192 for Trump and +150 for Harris. Trump's odds have continued to improve over the past week, as his chances were slightly below 60% just four days ago. Key swing states that are crucial for both candidates, particularly Florida and ...
Her history as Trump's ambassador to the United Nations gives her experience, and her policy positions place her at odds with the frontrunner. The Republican Party has followed Trump's lead in recent year's and become more isolationist. But Haley has taken a more traditional stance and h...
The 2024 US presidential odds are in constant flux at sportsbooks, but things have gotten interesting. After spending weeks with the same odds to win the presidency, Trump has a solid-but-not-insurmountable lead over Harris the day before Election Day. 2024 U.S. Presidential Odds Candidate ...
Trump’s odds of winning today are close to what we would call “likely” or “probable” rather than “certain” or “highly likely.” Believe it or not, there’s still a decent shot one of his rivals could win. Based on where they’re polling today, my crude model says DeSantis ...
Here’s who the prediction markets are saying will win this year’s Super Bowl BY Chris Morris February 6, 2025 Politics Polymarket tilts toward a Donald Trump victory in the election—but how accurate is it? BY Christiaan Hetzner October 22, 2024 Politics Trump’s odds on prediction...
25-1 odds: Grant and not expedite Granting cert and then pushing a decision out to 2025 would either make the court’s problem disappear or make it infinitely worse. If Trump is not elected president, the Supreme Court could dodge the question entirely by dismissing the case as moot. But ...
What are the odds of Trump’s winning in 2020, given that the last three presidents were comfortably re-elected despite one being a serial adulterer, one losing the popular vote, and one bringing race to the forefront? My reply: Serial adulterer, poor vote in previous election, ethnicity ....