Trader consensus on Venezuela's head of state by end of 2026 pits Nicolás Maduro at 47.3% against acting interim president Delcy Rodríguez at 41%, reflecting uncertainty three months after U.S. forces captured Maduro on January 3, with the Supreme Court installing Rodríguez per constitutional succession. Her recent military high command overhaul in March and U.S. sanction relief on April 1 have solidified her grip, enabling wage hikes and oil reforms amid economic stabilization signals. However, opposition leader María Corina Machado's April demands for snap presidential elections—citing the nearing 90-day interim limit and National Assembly procedural deadlines—fuel doubts over Rodríguez's longevity, while Maduro's U.S. legal battles leave room for his potential return or Chavismo resurgence, keeping the race tightly contested ahead of possible June votes.
Riepilogo sperimentale generato dall'AI con riferimento ai dati di Polymarket. Questo non è un consiglio di trading e non ha alcun ruolo nella risoluzione di questo mercato. · AggiornatoLeader del Venezuela alla fine del 2026?
Leader del Venezuela alla fine del 2026?
Nicolás Maduro 45.5%
Delcy Rodríguez 42%
María Corina Machado 8%
Nessun capo di stato <1%
$82,887,521 Vol.
$82,887,521 Vol.
Nicolás Maduro
46%
Delcy Rodríguez
42%
María Corina Machado
8%
Nessun capo di stato
1%
Edmundo González
<1%
Donald Trump
<1%
Marco Rubio
<1%
Diosdado Cabello Rondón
<1%
Dinorah Figuera
<1%
Jorge Rodríguez
<1%
Vladimir Padrino López
<1%
Pete Hegseth
<1%
Frank Donovan
<1%
Evan Pettus
<1%
Dan Caine
<1%
Richard Grenell
<1%
Nicolás Maduro 45.5%
Delcy Rodríguez 42%
María Corina Machado 8%
Nessun capo di stato <1%
$82,887,521 Vol.
$82,887,521 Vol.
Nicolás Maduro
46%
Delcy Rodríguez
42%
María Corina Machado
8%
Nessun capo di stato
1%
Edmundo González
<1%
Donald Trump
<1%
Marco Rubio
<1%
Diosdado Cabello Rondón
<1%
Dinorah Figuera
<1%
Jorge Rodríguez
<1%
Vladimir Padrino López
<1%
Pete Hegseth
<1%
Frank Donovan
<1%
Evan Pettus
<1%
Dan Caine
<1%
Richard Grenell
<1%
For the purposes of this market, "officially holds" refers to the individual that was formally appointed, confirmed (if confirmation is required), and sworn in as the head of state of Venezuela or otherwise confirmed by official government information as being the head of state of Venezuela.
If the Venezuelan government does not clearly state who is the head of state, the market will resolve to the individual who is listed as the Head of State by the UN (see: https://www.un.org/dgacm/en/content/protocol/hshgnfa.
In the event that more than one official head of state is listed by the Venezuelan government, this market will resolve to the individual who is listed as having primary status. If no distinction is made, the market will resolve to the individual who first assumed the position.
If no individual holds the position this market will resolve to “No Head of State”.
The following do NOT constitute "officially holding" the role: nominated, announced, or designated as the head of state of Venezuela but appointment not yet effective; appointed with an effective date after Dec 31, 2026; previously served as the head of state of Venezuela but term has expired, resigned, or been terminated before Dec 31, 2026; serving as the head of state of Venezuela in a consultant, contractor, or unofficial capacity; named as successor or heir apparent to the head of state of Venezuela but not yet appointed; or holding a different role with oversight of the head of state of Venezuela but not the specified position itself.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the UN recognized government of Venezuela. If the Government of Venezuela does not clearly state who is the head of state, information from the UN and a consensus of credible reporting may be used.
Note: this market is mutually exclusive.
Mercato aperto: Jan 4, 2026, 1:09 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...For the purposes of this market, "officially holds" refers to the individual that was formally appointed, confirmed (if confirmation is required), and sworn in as the head of state of Venezuela or otherwise confirmed by official government information as being the head of state of Venezuela.
If the Venezuelan government does not clearly state who is the head of state, the market will resolve to the individual who is listed as the Head of State by the UN (see: https://www.un.org/dgacm/en/content/protocol/hshgnfa.
In the event that more than one official head of state is listed by the Venezuelan government, this market will resolve to the individual who is listed as having primary status. If no distinction is made, the market will resolve to the individual who first assumed the position.
If no individual holds the position this market will resolve to “No Head of State”.
The following do NOT constitute "officially holding" the role: nominated, announced, or designated as the head of state of Venezuela but appointment not yet effective; appointed with an effective date after Dec 31, 2026; previously served as the head of state of Venezuela but term has expired, resigned, or been terminated before Dec 31, 2026; serving as the head of state of Venezuela in a consultant, contractor, or unofficial capacity; named as successor or heir apparent to the head of state of Venezuela but not yet appointed; or holding a different role with oversight of the head of state of Venezuela but not the specified position itself.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the UN recognized government of Venezuela. If the Government of Venezuela does not clearly state who is the head of state, information from the UN and a consensus of credible reporting may be used.
Note: this market is mutually exclusive.
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Trader consensus on Venezuela's head of state by end of 2026 pits Nicolás Maduro at 47.3% against acting interim president Delcy Rodríguez at 41%, reflecting uncertainty three months after U.S. forces captured Maduro on January 3, with the Supreme Court installing Rodríguez per constitutional succession. Her recent military high command overhaul in March and U.S. sanction relief on April 1 have solidified her grip, enabling wage hikes and oil reforms amid economic stabilization signals. However, opposition leader María Corina Machado's April demands for snap presidential elections—citing the nearing 90-day interim limit and National Assembly procedural deadlines—fuel doubts over Rodríguez's longevity, while Maduro's U.S. legal battles leave room for his potential return or Chavismo resurgence, keeping the race tightly contested ahead of possible June votes.
Riepilogo sperimentale generato dall'AI con riferimento ai dati di Polymarket. Questo non è un consiglio di trading e non ha alcun ruolo nella risoluzione di questo mercato. · Aggiornato
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