From the smoke-filled rooms of tomorrow, a most peculiar dispatch arrives: the Democratic Party of 2028 has no chosen champion. Prediction markets, with their cold arithmetic, place no single contender above 25% — a figure that speaks less of triumph than of collective uncertainty. The party, it seems, enters its primary season not with a parade but with a shrug.
The stakes are considerable. A party without a commanding frontrunner risks a prolonged and costly internecine contest, the sort that leaves nominees bruised and treasuries depleted before the general election even commences. Market consensus on Polymarket — backed by over five million dollars in daily trading volume — suggests the field remains genuinely competitive, with any number of aspirants holding plausible claims to the nomination. In such a crowded theatre, fortunes may turn on a single debate, a scandal, or a sudden retirement.
Should one contender consolidate establishment support or capture a viral moment in the early primary states, these odds could shift dramatically and swiftly.