The DeFi Report - Sponsor Image The DeFi Report - Industry-leading crypto research trusted by finance pros. Friend & Sponsor Learn more

U.S. Representative Seeks Prediction Market Ban for Federal Officials

Ritchie Torres wants to limit how federal officials make bets on prediction markets.
U.S. Representative Seeks Prediction Market Ban for Federal Officials
Listen
0
0
0:00 0:00

Subscribe to Bankless or sign in

Representative Ritchie Torres (D-NY) is rallying support for the Public Integrity in Financial Prediction Markets Act of 2026. The bill seeks to bar government officials from using insider information to profit from prediction markets.

What's the Scoop?

  • Insider Edge: Government officials may have advanced knowledge of events before they occur. These privileged insights could be unfairly monetized by using prediction markets to front run the outcome of an event.
  • Trading Ban: Representative Torres' three-page bill seeks to ban elected federal government officials, political appointees, and employees of Executive branch agencies from using non-public information to place bets on prediction market platforms.
  • Recent Example: Immediately prior to the kidnapping/arrest of Venezuelan Nicolás Maduro, a Polymarket Polymarket user bet $30k that Maduro would be ousted by the end of January and netted over $400k in profit. The Torres bill expressly seeks to ban such behavior.
  • Unclear Goal: In a comment to Axios, a Kalshi spokesperson noted that their prediction market already bans insider trading and is regulated by the CFTC, making it unclear what that bill would accomplish.

Jack Inabinet

Written by Jack Inabinet

859 Articles View all      

Jack Inabinet is a Senior Analyst with a passion for exploring the bleeding edge of crypto and finance. Prior to joining Bankless, Jack worked as an analyst at HAL Real Estate where he conducted market research and financial analysis for commercial real estate development and acquisition activities in the Seattle region. He graduated from the University of Washington’s Michael G. Foster School of Business.

No Responses
Search Bankless