President Trump has continued to emphasize election security concerns during his second term, including investigations into prior voting processes and administration actions targeting noncitizen voter rolls ahead of the 2026 midterms. Recent developments include the ousting of election commission members and public statements linking foreign actors to potential threats, amid ongoing geopolitical tensions with nations such as Iran. With only days remaining until July 16, trader focus centers on any new official remarks or executive measures that could name specific countries. Historical patterns show such accusations often tie to diplomatic disputes or domestic policy priorities rather than verified incidents within short timeframes.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket. Ceci n'est pas un conseil de trading et ne joue aucun rôle dans la résolution de ce marché. · Mis à jour$10,508 Vol.

Iran
66%

Ukraine
26%

Chine
21%

Russie
17%

Corée du Nord
16%

Mexique
15%

Allemagne
12%

Canada
6%

Israël
5%
$10,508 Vol.

Iran
66%

Ukraine
26%

Chine
21%

Russie
17%

Corée du Nord
16%

Mexique
15%

Allemagne
12%

Canada
6%

Israël
5%
Qualifying interference includes, but is not limited to: manipulation of vote tallies or voting machines; hacking of election infrastructure; casting of fraudulent ballots; coordinated disinformation or influence campaigns intended to alter the election's outcome; or illegal foreign funding of campaigns. Allegations limited to procedural irregularities, administrative errors, ordinary lobbying, legal foreign media coverage, or fraud of domestic or unspecified origin will not qualify.
The alleged interference must be attributed to the government of the listed country, a state-affiliated entity, organization, or nationals of the listed country acting in that capacity. The actor must be identified at least at the national level (e.g., "China," "Russian operatives," "Iranian hackers").
A qualifying statement must definitively allege that election interference occurred. Statements that are clearly satirical, hypothetical, or rhetorical will not qualify (e.g., "Did China interfere? Who knows," "If China interfered...", "They could easily interfere”).
A statement need not use the word "interference." Any phrasing that communicates the three elements above (e.g., "China stole the election," "Russia rigged the vote in Pennsylvania") will qualify.
Reposts, retweets, or shares of third-party content will qualify only if accompanied by original commentary from Trump that itself meets the criteria above, or if the repost includes an unambiguous endorsement of a qualifying claim (e.g., "TRUE!"). A bare repost without comment will not qualify.
Statements made by representatives will not alone qualify. Reports of private conversations, leaked audio not intended for public release, and secondhand accounts will not qualify.
Any public statement from the listed individual, written or verbal, will qualify. Speeches in which the listed individual begins speaking within the time frame of this market will qualify, even if their allegation falls outside the market’s timeframe.
The resolution source for this market will be public statements by Donald Trump.
Marché ouvert : Jul 13, 2026, 10:32 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Qualifying interference includes, but is not limited to: manipulation of vote tallies or voting machines; hacking of election infrastructure; casting of fraudulent ballots; coordinated disinformation or influence campaigns intended to alter the election's outcome; or illegal foreign funding of campaigns. Allegations limited to procedural irregularities, administrative errors, ordinary lobbying, legal foreign media coverage, or fraud of domestic or unspecified origin will not qualify.
The alleged interference must be attributed to the government of the listed country, a state-affiliated entity, organization, or nationals of the listed country acting in that capacity. The actor must be identified at least at the national level (e.g., "China," "Russian operatives," "Iranian hackers").
A qualifying statement must definitively allege that election interference occurred. Statements that are clearly satirical, hypothetical, or rhetorical will not qualify (e.g., "Did China interfere? Who knows," "If China interfered...", "They could easily interfere”).
A statement need not use the word "interference." Any phrasing that communicates the three elements above (e.g., "China stole the election," "Russia rigged the vote in Pennsylvania") will qualify.
Reposts, retweets, or shares of third-party content will qualify only if accompanied by original commentary from Trump that itself meets the criteria above, or if the repost includes an unambiguous endorsement of a qualifying claim (e.g., "TRUE!"). A bare repost without comment will not qualify.
Statements made by representatives will not alone qualify. Reports of private conversations, leaked audio not intended for public release, and secondhand accounts will not qualify.
Any public statement from the listed individual, written or verbal, will qualify. Speeches in which the listed individual begins speaking within the time frame of this market will qualify, even if their allegation falls outside the market’s timeframe.
The resolution source for this market will be public statements by Donald Trump.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...President Trump has continued to emphasize election security concerns during his second term, including investigations into prior voting processes and administration actions targeting noncitizen voter rolls ahead of the 2026 midterms. Recent developments include the ousting of election commission members and public statements linking foreign actors to potential threats, amid ongoing geopolitical tensions with nations such as Iran. With only days remaining until July 16, trader focus centers on any new official remarks or executive measures that could name specific countries. Historical patterns show such accusations often tie to diplomatic disputes or domestic policy priorities rather than verified incidents within short timeframes.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket. Ceci n'est pas un conseil de trading et ne joue aucun rôle dans la résolution de ce marché. · Mis à jour
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