Taiwan's opposition-led Legislative Yuan, controlled by KMT and TPP lawmakers holding about 60 of 113 seats, lacks the three-fourths supermajority (85 votes) constitutionally required under Article 100 to impeach President Lai Ching-te, driving trader consensus to 97.6% on "No" by June 30. Recent hearings concluded in late April over Lai's refusal to sign a revised fiscal allocation law, with a symbolic roll-call vote scheduled for May 19 unlikely to pass due to DPP's 51 seats blocking any coalition. Absent extraordinary defections, scandals, or legal reinterpretations shifting legislator support, the procedural impasse solidifies high-confidence expectations of failure, reflecting the wisdom of crowds in this mathematically constrained scenario.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedLai Ching-te impeached by June 30?
Lai Ching-te impeached by June 30?
$615,885 Vol.
$615,885 Vol.
$615,885 Vol.
$615,885 Vol.
For this market to resolve to "Yes" it is only necessary that the Legislative Yuan propose and approve a motion of impeachment against Lai Ching-te, regardless of whether the Constitutional Court later upholds the impeachment.
The primary resolution source for this market is official information from the Taiwanese government, however a consensus of credible reporting may be used.
Market Opened: Jan 2, 2026, 8:15 AM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For this market to resolve to "Yes" it is only necessary that the Legislative Yuan propose and approve a motion of impeachment against Lai Ching-te, regardless of whether the Constitutional Court later upholds the impeachment.
The primary resolution source for this market is official information from the Taiwanese government, however a consensus of credible reporting may be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Taiwan's opposition-led Legislative Yuan, controlled by KMT and TPP lawmakers holding about 60 of 113 seats, lacks the three-fourths supermajority (85 votes) constitutionally required under Article 100 to impeach President Lai Ching-te, driving trader consensus to 97.6% on "No" by June 30. Recent hearings concluded in late April over Lai's refusal to sign a revised fiscal allocation law, with a symbolic roll-call vote scheduled for May 19 unlikely to pass due to DPP's 51 seats blocking any coalition. Absent extraordinary defections, scandals, or legal reinterpretations shifting legislator support, the procedural impasse solidifies high-confidence expectations of failure, reflecting the wisdom of crowds in this mathematically constrained scenario.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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