**No recent public statements, scheduled announcements, or verified reporting indicate that President Trump plans to allege foreign election interference by the country of Georgia before the July 16 deadline.** The longstanding 2020 Georgia (U.S. state) election-related legal matters concluded in late 2025 with charges dropped, and no new developments tie into foreign interference claims. Speculation on social media about possible remarks in an upcoming address exists but lacks confirmation from official sources or Trump’s own communications. Traders appear to view the absence of concrete catalysts—such as declassification orders, press events, or diplomatic statements—as the dominant factor supporting the 59% implied probability on “No.” Resolution hinges strictly on whether Trump makes the specific allegation by the cutoff, with no structural barriers or high-probability triggers evident in the immediate window.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket. Isto não é aconselhamento de trading e não tem qualquer papel na resolução deste mercado. · AtualizadoSim
Sim
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 a specific foreign government, foreign state-affiliated entity, foreign organization, or foreign nationals acting in that capacity. The actor must be identified at least at the national level (e.g., "China," "Russian operatives," "Iranian hackers"). Allegations against domestic actors, including US-based companies, media organizations, political parties, or election officials, will not qualify.
Qualifying statements must explicitly or through context unambiguously refer to the state of Georgia.
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 elements above (e.g., "China stole the Georgia Senate election," "Russia rigged the vote in Geogia") 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.
Mercado Aberto: Jul 14, 2026, 1:51 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 a specific foreign government, foreign state-affiliated entity, foreign organization, or foreign nationals acting in that capacity. The actor must be identified at least at the national level (e.g., "China," "Russian operatives," "Iranian hackers"). Allegations against domestic actors, including US-based companies, media organizations, political parties, or election officials, will not qualify.
Qualifying statements must explicitly or through context unambiguously refer to the state of Georgia.
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 elements above (e.g., "China stole the Georgia Senate election," "Russia rigged the vote in Geogia") 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...**No recent public statements, scheduled announcements, or verified reporting indicate that President Trump plans to allege foreign election interference by the country of Georgia before the July 16 deadline.** The longstanding 2020 Georgia (U.S. state) election-related legal matters concluded in late 2025 with charges dropped, and no new developments tie into foreign interference claims. Speculation on social media about possible remarks in an upcoming address exists but lacks confirmation from official sources or Trump’s own communications. Traders appear to view the absence of concrete catalysts—such as declassification orders, press events, or diplomatic statements—as the dominant factor supporting the 59% implied probability on “No.” Resolution hinges strictly on whether Trump makes the specific allegation by the cutoff, with no structural barriers or high-probability triggers evident in the immediate window.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket. Isto não é aconselhamento de trading e não tem qualquer papel na resolução deste mercado. · Atualizado


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