Florida's proposed constitutional amendment, placed on the November 2026 ballot after legislative approval in a June 2026 special session, seeks to raise homestead exemptions, tighten assessment caps on non-homestead property, and impose limits on certain local ad valorem taxes. Trader odds sit near even because the measure offers direct relief to homeowners amid rising property values while local governments and service providers highlight risks to funding for schools, public safety, and infrastructure. The 60 percent supermajority threshold adds uncertainty, and the final version differs from the governor's original proposal. Upcoming campaign messaging, local budget impact analyses, and voter turnout among property owners versus public-sector interests could shift the balance before election day.
Eksperymentalne podsumowanie AI odwołujące się do danych Polymarket. To nie jest porada handlowa i nie ma wpływu na rozstrzyganie tego rynku. · ZaktualizowanoThis market will resolve to “Yes” if the specified ballot measure is approved by the numerical threshold of voters in Florida required for it to pass at the statewide general election currently scheduled for November 3, 2026. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No.”
If voting on the specified ballot measure does not occur, or the results thereof are not known definitively, by March 31, 2027, this market will resolve to “No”.
Subsequent litigation or any failure to implement the measure will have no impact on the resolution of this market.
This market will resolve based on a consensus of credible reporting. If there is ambiguity, this market will resolve solely based on official information from the State of Florida, including the Florida Department of State (https://dos.fl.gov/).
Rynek otwarty: Jul 8, 2026, 6:20 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to “Yes” if the specified ballot measure is approved by the numerical threshold of voters in Florida required for it to pass at the statewide general election currently scheduled for November 3, 2026. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No.”
If voting on the specified ballot measure does not occur, or the results thereof are not known definitively, by March 31, 2027, this market will resolve to “No”.
Subsequent litigation or any failure to implement the measure will have no impact on the resolution of this market.
This market will resolve based on a consensus of credible reporting. If there is ambiguity, this market will resolve solely based on official information from the State of Florida, including the Florida Department of State (https://dos.fl.gov/).
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Florida's proposed constitutional amendment, placed on the November 2026 ballot after legislative approval in a June 2026 special session, seeks to raise homestead exemptions, tighten assessment caps on non-homestead property, and impose limits on certain local ad valorem taxes. Trader odds sit near even because the measure offers direct relief to homeowners amid rising property values while local governments and service providers highlight risks to funding for schools, public safety, and infrastructure. The 60 percent supermajority threshold adds uncertainty, and the final version differs from the governor's original proposal. Upcoming campaign messaging, local budget impact analyses, and voter turnout among property owners versus public-sector interests could shift the balance before election day.
Eksperymentalne podsumowanie AI odwołujące się do danych Polymarket. To nie jest porada handlowa i nie ma wpływu na rozstrzyganie tego rynku. · Zaktualizowano
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