2026 Midterms - My Lookahead Picks
5% Democrat Blue Wave in 2026 at 72c
5% Democrats to win the Senate at 46c
5% Democrats to win the Texas Senate at 35c
5% Democrats to win Ohio Senate at 43c
5% Democrats to win Ohio Governorship at 36c
Bonus pick - 5% JD Vance Not to be 2028 Nominee at 59c
As many of you may already have seen, The Barnes Betting Report for the midterms is out. It provides extensive background on trends going into midterms and draws parallels with the midterms taking place in November this year. If you haven't already read it, I would encourage you to do so. So far, I don't see any reason to disagree with Barnes' reading. It is very easily observable that inefficiencies in betting market pricing are larger the further out from an event you go; even something as simple as a Super Bowl coin toss would have a larger error of uncertainty eleven months out than one week out. For all we know, the coin might undergo some process that biases it slightly relative to how it was beforehand (not that it would, that it might and there's a non zero probability of such). Political betting markets are nowhere near as efficient as sports betting markets as not only is there far less volume (and hence sharp action) on it, but also because elections are based on large scale ensemble statistical mechanics. As such, you may treat an individual voter's choice as a random variable but the number of voters is so huge that the variance at electoral level is very small compared to a sporting event, where the number of participants is smaller and so is the number of probabilistic events on the field. Nonetheless, more than half a year out from a political event is when outcome prices are particularly unlikely to be priced sharply and thus provide an opportunity.
With that, let's go through my lookahead picks. These picks are all correlated as with large scale ensemble statistics, a drift in the underlying probability of one will cause a drift in expectation values for the entire ensemble. We saw this very directly in November when not only did the Democrats win big in all the major races that public eyes were watching, they also won big in minor races pretty much anywhere you go in the country. You could have picked a random spot on the map of the USA and bet on the Democrat candidate and you would have cashed. Therefore, the big edge in the mid terms is going to be getting the read at the national level correct. That is not to say there won't be some spots where Republicans buck the trend, but in this electoral environment, betting on any Republican is going to be like catching a falling knife.
Why am I on the blue wave and Democrats to win the Senate? 2024's political comeback did not come out of nowhere, it was a careful building of coalitions between the traditional GOP base, the rust belt white working class that voted Obama-Trump-Biden, southern Hispanics that were disillusioned with open borders, race riots and gay race communism, disaffected young men and Democrat voters who the Democrat party was openly hostile towards and several other miscellaneous groups, such as the Amish, who the governor of Pennsylvania made the grave mistake of not leaving alone. Even with all of that together, 2024 was not an electoral bloodbath for the Democrats. They may have lost the trifecta and the popular vote, but the Republicans did sweat the house for a bit as certain districts had votes trickle in for days and even weeks afterwards. Thus, any rupturing and lower engagement from any components of this coalition is going to propagate majorly down ballot.
We have seen major rifts in this coalition since Trump took office. The two biggest ones are on the economy and foregin intervention. If you go onto patriots.win (formerly thedonald.win and before that, r/TheDonald on Reddit, before the mass purges on that site) now, the majority voices there are war horny boomers and neocons. If you had looked on there last year, you would see amid voices of support for Trump, a genuine sense of unease and even betrayal at the direction his administration had taken. When Trump would tout economic numbers, you could go to the comments section and a few levels down you would see posts to the effect of love Trump, but don't piss on me and tell me it's raining. Blue collar America is still struggling to get jobs, those that are gainfully employed are not seeing their wages or salaries increase and their costs of living are still going up. At that time during the Iran strikes last year, you would also see a lot of voices say not our country, not our war, didn't vote for this and especially didn't vote to do Israel's dirty work. Now it's very common to see comments cheering on the bombing of Iran and insinuating that they deserved it. As a social media signal, I would see this as absolutely ominous. Those who voted Trump for jobs and no more wars have simply checked out and many of them will simply stay home on election night or will vote independent, or even vote Democrat to send a message.
There are other factors too that although they don't affect the average American on a day to day basis will still gnaw at that the back of their mind's. Trump's U turn on the Epstein files was a blunder on pretty much every level imaginable. Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago in the 2000s and was one of the first public figures to press for investigations against him. He even ran on exposing the Epstein paedophile class and bringing justice for the victims and yet his U turn has been so conspicuous that is has allowed his political opponents take this as evidence he was on of Epstein's clients himself! Democrats are adept at exploiting U turns like this and their messaging has already shifted to we represent the working class, Trump represents the Epstein class. Whether Trump was truly implicated in the files is immaterial at this point: a great many people voted for him to give him a mandate to take down the deep state and bring the global paedophile networks to justice and yet he reneged on this promise. That kind of trust is going to cause a great many people who supported him in 2024 to either stay at home or vote for someone else.
The house is all but lost at this point. The Supreme Court may rule favourably on the Voting Rights Act but the Democratic Party has already moved to gerrymander states where they have the power to do so. The Republican Party has tried to do this in places, but to nowhere near the same level of competency. The Senate is where things can start getting really ugly. Of particular interest int he state of Ohio. Up until the mid 2010s, Ohio was a solid swing state and a bellweather for the presidency. Ohio has voted solidly red in the Trump era due to his ability to connect with the white working class there. In 2024 Vivek Ramaswamy was a rising star of the right, who made a name for himself going after radical social progressivism and he did so with high debate sharpness and a textbook ability to turn his opponents' points on their heads. He did the smart thing of dropping out and endorsing Trump, establishing political stock and goodwill with the base at the same time. After Trump's win, he joined DOGE headed by Elon Musk. The turning point for him came when he made a long x post in which he came out in support H-1B visas by saying America needs more people with a strong work ethic, that success is built by spending more time studying and less time partying. This went down extraordinarily poorly with the MAGA base, who did not appreciate the insinuation that they were complicit in their own replacement. It was seen as a mask slipping moment and Vivek left DOGE soon after with his stock at an all time low.
Now someone with the slightest shred of self awareness would realise that they fucked up and retreat out of public eye for a while, maybe work on a few grassroots projects and then return to fore when enough time has passed that people might give you the benefit of the doubt. Not Vivek. Not long afterwards, he announced that he would run for governor of Ohio. In a positive electoral environment for Republicans, this kind of indulgence might have flown under the radar, but even then that's only a might. Vivek is overwhelmingly expected to be the nominee and that being the case, you're going to have the guy who crashed out over H-1B visas be the guy running for the governorship of a traditional rust belt swing state where the electorate was most elastic to Trump's messaging and he's almost certainly going to run against Amy Acton, who is hammering home the message of him being a rich out of stater who thinks the working class in Ohio is struggling because they're lazy. If you think this is a favourable electoral matchup, then as Messrs Mercouris and Christoforou of The Duran would say, I have a bridge to sell you.
More generally, I would expect Vivek to drag down the rest of the ticket. Jon Husted was appointed to replace JD Vance when he left the position to become Vice President. Usted did not win that mandate through standing for election and he is up against Sherrod Brown, who aside from losing his seat in a heavily red electoral environment in 2024 has won every other senate race he's run in with ease, and that's going all the way back to 2006. I see Ohio rebounding blue in a very big way in November and I expect both the Democrat governor and senator candidates to win big here. Keep an eye out for margin of victory markets when they come out.
Now, the Texas Senate race: James Talarico defeated Jasmine Crockett to become the Democrat nominee. Warning signs were when this guy appeared on Joe Rogan. His interview was a success, Joe liked him and even encouraged him to run for president. You can see in the comments section that there are a lot of independents and Republican voters who resonated with his messaging because it was populist but from a left wing point of view. Now, don't get me wrong. I listened to this guy and I couldn't stand him. As far as his messaging on Christianity is concerned, it's pure snake oil, even worse than Mamdani. As far as elections are concerned, he brought out a surge of Hispanics who were disillusioned with the Trump administration and he beat Crockett by a lot (she had no business winning a senate primary anyway). Things remain in the balance with the Republican primary still to complete a run-off. If Cornyn wins, I see Talarico defeating him easily. If Paxton wins, then he has a chance. A figure like Paxton is capable of bucking the trend in a bad electoral environment for Republicans but he's up against it. Cornyn has outspent him in the primary by about 20 to 1. Either way, I don't think the markets have adjusted for the Talarico hype train yet and whoever wins the Republican run off, I expect Talarico to climb in the betting odds as polls begin to catch his upswing in favourability. I may yet switch and take Paxton shortly before election day if he wins the nomination.
Finally, my lookahead pick for 2028 is for JD Vance not the be the nominee. JD is smart. People on the left love to pigeonhole him as weird, creepy and dumb (often times there's projection coming through there) but that's never come through at the electoral level. Running in 2028 in an extremely unfavourable environment is exactly the kind of vanity project they would expect him to engage in. I don't see him taking the bait. Someone like Vance understands full well how deeply unpopular Trump's second term has been and from what I can tell has behind the scenes strongly urged Trump not to follow through on military action against Iran. Vance will be able to read the writing on the wall, step aside to let someone like Rubio crash and burn while Vance himself builds a new, fresher coalition behind the scenes and prepares for a run in 2032 when the Democrats inevitably can't help themselves yet again. And even if they don't, It's not like he'll be an old man in 2036. He has his entire career ahead of him if he plays his cards right and I would expect him to choose his moment carefully. Even in some scenario where Trump leave office and JD replaces him, he will have a massive job on his hands and I would expect it to be a while before the market genuinely prices in his prospects for success in 2028, even if only as a nominee.
This is what I'm on for now, I will be looking at adding more lookahead picks over the coming months.