Recent judicial rulings have significantly reduced momentum for Alberta independence, with an Alberta court blocking a separatist referendum petition on May 13, 2026, after arguments over constitutional validity and lack of consultation with First Nations groups. This development follows earlier reports of U.S. officials holding meetings with separatist leaders and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent describing Alberta as a natural partner, yet no formal U.S. acquisition proposals or negotiations have advanced. Trump administration attention has instead focused on other expansionist priorities such as Greenland, while Canadian federal responses under Prime Minister Mark Carney have reinforced sovereignty protections. These factors align with traders assigning an 84.5 percent probability against any direct U.S. attempt to acquire territory in the province.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedSovereignty or control refers to any attempt to bring part of the territory of Alberta under the legal governance and jurisdiction of the United States, including as a state, territory, or other classification within the US system, or through an arrangement in which the US otherwise exercises governance and jurisdiction in the territory. Commercial agreements, trade deals, or other actions that do not seek formal US governance or jurisdiction over the territory will not count.
A qualifying announcement must directly state either ongoing direct efforts, or a clear intent to engage in direct efforts to take sovereignty or control over a portion of the territory of Alberta (e.g. “We are going to take Alberta” or “We are trying to take Alberta” would count). Statements that express a desire to control Alberta, but do not express a clear intent to engage in direct efforts to take sovereignty or control over Albertan territory (e.g. “We want Alberta,” or “We’re looking into purchasing Alberta”) will not count.
A consensus of credible reporting that the United States is undertaking ongoing direct efforts or negotiations to acquire, purchase, annex, or otherwise take sovereignty or control over any portion of the territory of Alberta will also suffice for a “Yes” resolution.
The primary resolution sources will be official information from Donald Trump and the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Feb 6, 2026, 5:59 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Sovereignty or control refers to any attempt to bring part of the territory of Alberta under the legal governance and jurisdiction of the United States, including as a state, territory, or other classification within the US system, or through an arrangement in which the US otherwise exercises governance and jurisdiction in the territory. Commercial agreements, trade deals, or other actions that do not seek formal US governance or jurisdiction over the territory will not count.
A qualifying announcement must directly state either ongoing direct efforts, or a clear intent to engage in direct efforts to take sovereignty or control over a portion of the territory of Alberta (e.g. “We are going to take Alberta” or “We are trying to take Alberta” would count). Statements that express a desire to control Alberta, but do not express a clear intent to engage in direct efforts to take sovereignty or control over Albertan territory (e.g. “We want Alberta,” or “We’re looking into purchasing Alberta”) will not count.
A consensus of credible reporting that the United States is undertaking ongoing direct efforts or negotiations to acquire, purchase, annex, or otherwise take sovereignty or control over any portion of the territory of Alberta will also suffice for a “Yes” resolution.
The primary resolution sources will be official information from Donald Trump and the United States federal government; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Recent judicial rulings have significantly reduced momentum for Alberta independence, with an Alberta court blocking a separatist referendum petition on May 13, 2026, after arguments over constitutional validity and lack of consultation with First Nations groups. This development follows earlier reports of U.S. officials holding meetings with separatist leaders and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent describing Alberta as a natural partner, yet no formal U.S. acquisition proposals or negotiations have advanced. Trump administration attention has instead focused on other expansionist priorities such as Greenland, while Canadian federal responses under Prime Minister Mark Carney have reinforced sovereignty protections. These factors align with traders assigning an 84.5 percent probability against any direct U.S. attempt to acquire territory in the province.
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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