Despite crypto prediction markets platform Polymarket being on the “center stage” as the United States presidential election approaches, its founder claims that it has no intention of being recognized as a political website.
“Polymarket is not about politics. The vision never was to be a political website, and it still isn’t. From launch day, the goal has been to, “harness the power of free markets to demystify the real world events that matter most to you,” Polymarket founder Shayne Coplan stated in an Oct. 25 X post.
Coplan shuts down rumors of holding political bias
Coplan also dismissed rumors that those behind the platform are “Dem operatives” or holds any political bias.
“Unfortunately the story is much less juicy, we’re just market nerds who think prediction markets provide the public with a much needed alternative data source,” Coplan stated.
“Polymarket is strictly non-partisan. We get told we’re Dem operatives and MAGA, depending on the day.”
He explained that as the United States presidential election draws nearer this November, the platform has been “pulled onto center stage,” claiming that people are “fed up” with attempting to understand pundits and “incongruent polls.”
“Polymarket’s rise in popularity correlates with correctly forecasting Biden dropping out,” Coplan further claimed.
Politics a vehicle for bringing the masses to market-based forecasts
Coplan is hopeful that “politics is the first step to get the masses to realize the value of market-based forecasts.”
On Oct. 7, Cointelegraph reported that technology billionaire Elon Musk recently sparked a wave of interest in Polymarket after the billionaire said the site could more accurately predict the results of the 2024 United States presidential election than traditional polling.
At the time of Musk’s post, Donald Trump was leading Democratic candidate Kamala Harris by a margin of about three percentage points.
“Trump now leading Kamala by 3% in betting markets. More accurate than polls, as actual money is on the line,” Musk claimed.
However, on Oct. 20, Trump’s recent 20-point lead in the presidential race over Vice President Kamala Harris on Polymarket sparked concerns that the market may be manipulated.
Tarek Mansour — founder of the Kalshi prediction market — argued that the results are accurate and not caused by inorganic manipulation, when he presented comparable data from Kalshi.