Conflicting recent polls underpin the 50% implied probability for President-elect Trump's approval rating rising this week, with trader consensus reflecting a tight balance between optimistic economic signals and divisive transition developments. Gallup's latest survey shows approval steady at 47%, while YouGov indicates a slight uptick to 49% amid post-election market highs and strong GDP growth perceptions; conversely, Quinnipiac reports a dip tied to controversies over cabinet picks like Pete Hegseth and ongoing partisan divides. The competitive odds stem from this polling variance and historical volatility in honeymoon periods. Tipping factors include fresh national surveys, Senate hearings on nominees, or macroeconomic releases like jobs data, any of which could sway the weekly average decisively.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jourTrump approval Up or Down this week?
Trump approval Up or Down this week?
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This market will resolve to "Down" if Donald Trump's Silver Bulletin approval rating is higher on March 20, 2026, than on March 27, 2026.
This market will resolve to 50-50 if Donald Trump's Silver Bulletin approval rating is the same on each date.
The data point for the second reference date will only be considered once a subsequent day’s data point has been published, thereby finalizing the value for the second date.
If no data point is published for the first reference date, the most recent prior day with a published data point will be used instead.
If no data point is published for the second reference date by 12:00 PM ET on the third calendar day after that date, the most recent prior day with a published data point will be used instead.
This market's resolution source will be Silver Bulletin's approval rating poll aggregator, https://www.natesilver.net/p/trump-approval-ratings-nate-silver-bulletin, specifically the approval rating indicated by the green trend line for the resolution date. Changes in the methodology by which Silver Bulletin calculates the approval rating will have no bearing on the resolution of this market. If Silver Bulletin's approval rating becomes permanently unavailable, RealClearPolitics will be used.
The resolution source reports the rating value to only one decimal point (e.g., 42.8%, 33.9%, etc). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Marché ouvert : Mar 20, 2026, 2:30 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to "Down" if Donald Trump's Silver Bulletin approval rating is higher on March 20, 2026, than on March 27, 2026.
This market will resolve to 50-50 if Donald Trump's Silver Bulletin approval rating is the same on each date.
The data point for the second reference date will only be considered once a subsequent day’s data point has been published, thereby finalizing the value for the second date.
If no data point is published for the first reference date, the most recent prior day with a published data point will be used instead.
If no data point is published for the second reference date by 12:00 PM ET on the third calendar day after that date, the most recent prior day with a published data point will be used instead.
This market's resolution source will be Silver Bulletin's approval rating poll aggregator, https://www.natesilver.net/p/trump-approval-ratings-nate-silver-bulletin, specifically the approval rating indicated by the green trend line for the resolution date. Changes in the methodology by which Silver Bulletin calculates the approval rating will have no bearing on the resolution of this market. If Silver Bulletin's approval rating becomes permanently unavailable, RealClearPolitics will be used.
The resolution source reports the rating value to only one decimal point (e.g., 42.8%, 33.9%, etc). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Conflicting recent polls underpin the 50% implied probability for President-elect Trump's approval rating rising this week, with trader consensus reflecting a tight balance between optimistic economic signals and divisive transition developments. Gallup's latest survey shows approval steady at 47%, while YouGov indicates a slight uptick to 49% amid post-election market highs and strong GDP growth perceptions; conversely, Quinnipiac reports a dip tied to controversies over cabinet picks like Pete Hegseth and ongoing partisan divides. The competitive odds stem from this polling variance and historical volatility in honeymoon periods. Tipping factors include fresh national surveys, Senate hearings on nominees, or macroeconomic releases like jobs data, any of which could sway the weekly average decisively.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour
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