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US lawmakers Murphy, Casar push legislation to regulate prediction markets

United States Senator Chris Murphy and House Representative Greg Casar are set to introduce legislation to rein in prediction markets after bettors cashed in on geopolitical conflicts, including the joint strikes the US and Israel launched against Iran and the abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

On Tuesday, the two lawmakers announced their intent to introduce the Banning Event Trading on Sensitive Operations and Federal Functions (BETS OFF) Act, which would prohibit wagers on “government actions, terrorism, war, assassination, and events where an individual knows or controls the outcome”.

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“Our legislation is pretty simple. It simply says that these markets cannot allow people to make bets on government decision-making and frankly on other instances where there is one single individual who controls and knows the outcome of a market,” Murphy told reporters.

The bill comes amid a slate of legislation to put guardrails on prediction market platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, which allow users to wager money on the outcomes of real-life events.

Already, bets on the platforms have been placed on US military strikes and monetary policy.

“What happens to us spiritually when every moral question in this country becomes a market? Don’t we lose something? Don’t we rot a little bit inside when the question of famine in Gaza isn’t a question of what is right and what is wrong, but whether you can make money or lose money?” Murphy added.

“I think it’s really important that there are certain matters that are not monetised by prediction markets.”

Making a profit on war?

Critics have pointed to the trends on the online betting platforms that suggest links between upcoming government actions and increases in the number of bets made.

For example, in the hours leading up to the US-Israeli attack on Iran in late February, 150 new accounts appeared on Polymarket and made wagers on the then-looming strikes.

Of those accounts, 109 made more than $10,000, and one made more than half a million dollars, according to Casar and Murphy.

As Al Jazeera previously reported, one Polymarket user, known as Magamyman, made more than $500,000 with a wager that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would be out of power. That bet was placed only hours before the February 28 strike.

That echoes what happened in the lead-up to the January 3 attack to topple Maduro.

A trader profited from the attack by predicting Maduro’s ousting only hours before US forces abducted him. The payout, in that case, was $400,000.

On Polymarket, in particular, users can wager anonymously, raising questions about whether government officials might be profiting from insider knowledge.

At Tuesday’s news conference, Murphy alleged that the recent bets on the Iran war and the Venezuela attack must have come either from the White House or someone close to the administration.

“It seems pretty clear what happened. People inside the White House — or those close to the White House with knowledge of the attack that was imminent — cashed in,” the Connecticut senator said.

Casar, who represents parts of San Antonio and Austin, Texas, suggested that the prospect of profiting from online bets could even influence government decisions.

“We shouldn’t be living in a country where someone is sitting in the situation room, making decisions on whether to invade or to bomb, decisions about war and peace, life and death — that those decisions could be driven by the fact that they have hundreds of thousands of dollars riding on the decision,” Casar added.

Al Jazeera followed up with Murphy’s office to ask if the lawmakers had proof that the White House or someone close to the White House made the bets, but the office has yet to respond.

The White House, meanwhile, pushed back on allegations that President Donald Trump or his officials were involved in the high-stakes bets.

“The only special interest guiding the Trump Administration’s decision-making is the best interest of the American people,” White House spokesperson Davis Ingle told Al Jazeera in a statement.

The president’s son is actively involved in the prediction markets, however.

In August 2025, Donald Trump Jr joined Polymarket’s board. The venture capital firm 1789 Capital, which lists Trump Jr as a partner, backed Polymarket only a month after the Department of Justice dropped its investigation into the platform.

Trump Jr is also a strategic adviser to Kalshi. He joined in January 2025, only months before the Commodity Futures Trading Commission withdrew an appeal to block a federal court decision allowing Kalshi to offer bets on US elections.

A wave of legislation

Concerns about prediction markets extend far beyond bets on government actions, though.

The legislation Murphy and Casar have proposed would also ban bets on outcomes that can be controlled, including the results of award shows.

“The people who benefit in these markets are always the powerful,” Murphy said. “The people who know who know who is going to perform at the Super Bowl, the people who know what words the president is going to use in a speech are very powerful people.”

Casar added that he is not opposed to gambling in general, but that he and Murphy are simply trying to ensure a level playing field.

“I think we should have the ability for folks to go to a casino and play a poker game or play a game of roulette, but we have rules that say the house cannot rig the poker game,” Casar said.

“When people get on their phone and see these prediction markets, they expect that there are rules to make sure the game isn’t rigged against them.”

Their legislation is part of a slate of bills and regulatory pushes to increase oversight across the entire prediction market industry.

Just this month, Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal introduced legislation that would establish federal consumer protections for the prediction market industry, including through age verification for usage and a ban on advertisements targeting underage users.

Senators Jeff Merkley and Amy Klobuchar, both Democrats, also put forward legislation that would bar elected officials from profiting from prediction markets.

And lawmakers in Minnesota are pushing to ban prediction markets altogether, as a violation of state gambling laws. Arizona, meanwhile, filed criminal charges against Kalshi on Tuesday, citing similar reasons.

“I hope we take a comprehensive look at the way that prediction markets are rigging our entire economy and government actions,” Murphy said.

Trump says it’s a ‘good thing’ counterterrorism director resigned over Iran

NewsFeed

US President Donald Trump has reacted to the resignation of the US National Counterterrorism Centre’s director, Joe Kent, saying that he couldn’t work with somebody who didn’t believe Iran was a threat. Trump also said his decision to bomb Iran avoided a ‘nuclear holocaust’.

Starmer, Zelenskyy urge ‘focus’ on Ukraine as Iran war diverts attention

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has met British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in London to sign a new defence pact as the unfolding US-Israeli war on Iran threatened to divert international attention away from Russia’s attacks on Ukraine.

Starmer welcomed Zelenskyy at his official Downing Street residence on Tuesday, reassuring the Ukrainian leader that “the focus must remain on Ukraine”, days after the US partially rolled back sanctions against Moscow to cool oil prices sent soaring by its attacks on Iran.

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The British Prime Minister’s office said NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte would also join the meeting to discuss peacemaking efforts in Ukraine, which have so far been led by the US, but have stalled as the war on Iran escalates, and “the need to maintain sanctions pressure on Russia”.

“There is obviously a conflict in Iran going on, in the Middle East, but we can’t lose focus on what’s going on in Ukraine and the need for our support there,” said Starmer, who was meeting Zelenskyy to sign a defence partnership aimed at boosting “global defensive capability against the proliferation of low-cost, high-tech military hardware”.

The deal would combine Ukraine’s “expertise” in building high-tech, battle-tested drone interceptors and the UK’s “industrial base to manufacture and supply drones and innovative capabilities”, said Starmer’s office.

Starmer said in a statement that “drones, electronic warfare and rapid battlefield innovation are now central to national and economic security, and that has only been further magnified by the conflict in the Middle East”.

“Our priorities are clear – more security and opportunities for Ukraine,” said Zelenskyy on X, as he arrived in London, before his trip to Spain on Wednesday.

Turkiye offers to host talks as US efforts stall

As Zelenskyy met Starmer, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan spoke by phone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, reiterating that Turkiye stands ready to host the next round of negotiations between Moscow and Kyiv.

Turkiye’s Foreign Ministry said the discussion focused on risks posed by the prolonged war for regional countries and the international order, while also addressing issues related to energy security.

Fidan’s offer came as US-brokered talks between delegations from Russia and Ukraine, which have so far yielded no significant progress on key issues, have lost momentum amid the Middle East conflict.

As well as diverting attention away from peace efforts, the war in Iran is draining stocks of US air defence missiles that are crucial for Kyiv to shoot down Russian missiles.

Ukraine is the “ultimate loser” from the war with Iran, Ed Arnold, senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London, told The Associated Press news agency.

Zelenskyy is hoping to leverage Ukraine’s expertise in drone interception to obtain the expensive defence systems it needs to defend itself against Russia’s ballistic missiles.

He said on Tuesday that more than 200 Ukrainian experts are currently in the Middle East to help countries down Iranian drones.

Ukraine claims it ‘wrecked’ Russia’s March offensive

Meanwhile, on the ground, counterattacks by Ukraine at eastern and southern points along the front line had wrecked Moscow’s plans for a March offensive, Zelenskyy claims on Monday evening.

His comments could not be independently verified, but the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said on Monday that Ukrainian counterattacks “are likely constraining” some Russian offensive operations.

A Russian attack damaged industrial, port and energy infrastructure facilities in Ukraine’s Odesa region on the Black Sea overnight. Regional Governor Oleh Kiper said fires were quickly put out and there were no casualties.

Ukraine’s air force said that Russia launched 178 long-range drones of various types across the country overnight, starting late Monday, with 154 of them either intercepted or jammed while 22 more struck their targets.

Sappers examine the site of a Russian missile strike on Zaporizhzhia
Sappers examine the site of a Russian missile strike which hit a post office storehouse in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on 17 March, 2026 [Kateryna Klochko/AP Photo]

In the southern Ukraine city of Zaporizhzhia, a Russian strike damaged a terminal of Ukraine’s biggest private delivery company, Nova Poshta, the company said on Telegram.

Eight people were wounded, according to Ivan Fedorov, the governor of the Zaporizhia region.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that its air defences intercepted and destroyed 206 Ukrainian drones overnight over Russian regions, Ukraine’s annexed Crimean Peninsula and the Azov Sea.

A total of 40 intercepted drones were flying towards Moscow, the ministry said.

[BREAKING] World Cup Play-Off: NFF Appeals After FIFA Rejects DR Congo Petition

The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has announced that it is appealing the decision of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee, which rejected its petition challenging the eligibility of certain players fielded by the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) during the 2026 FIFA World Cup play-off in Rabat, Morocco, last November.

Nigeria had been eliminated from the play-offs after losing to DR Congo 4-3 on penalties.

Following the match, the NFF raised concerns over the legitimacy of some DR Congo players, alleging irregularities in the issuance of passports that qualified them for the fixture.

After several months of deliberation, FIFA delivered its verdict rejecting Nigeria’s petition.

The NFF, however, confirmed it has formally launched an appeal, signaling its determination to pursue the matter through the proper channels.

“We have received the decision of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee on our petition, but we are not satisfied with the decision, which rejected our petition.

“I want to assure Nigerians that the NFF has immediately commenced the process of appealing the decision,” said NFF General Secretary, Dr Mohammed Sanusi.

Why Bayern may have to play 16-year-old in goal

Mike Peter

BBC Sport journalist

Bayern Munich may hand 16-year-old goalkeeper Leonard Prescott his first-team debut in the Champions League on Wednesday.

The German giants have three goalkeepers struggling with injury and if Jonas Urbig fails to recover from concussion then Prescott will play in the second leg of their last 16 tie against Atalanta, head coach Vincent Kompany said.

Urbig sustained his injury in Bayern’s 6-1 victory in Italy last week, while regular starter Manuel Neuer is working towards full fitness after a muscle tear and third-choice keeper Sven Ulreich picked up an adductor issue in Saturday’s 1-1 draw at Bayer Leverkusen.

“Jonas trained normally today [Tuesday]. The decision tomorrow will be a medical one,” Kompany said.

“If everything goes well then Urbig will be in goal. If not then we will have to find another solution.”

Prescott, a German youth international who plays for Bayern’s under-19s, will require clearance from German labour authorities to work in the evening as he is a teenager.

He has been on Bayern’s bench in their past two matches with fellow teenage keeper Leon Klanac, 19, also out with a thigh injury.

Reserve team keeper Janis Bartl, 19, has featured on the Bayern bench in two Bundesliga matches this season, but it is Prescott who Kompany will turn to if necessary.

“He [Prescott] is very calm. Overall, we as a staff are also calm. If he plays tomorrow he will have our full backing. Everyone will help,” Kompany added.

“There will never be a young player who will be forced to play a main role. We have full confidence in him whatever happens tomorrow.”

Neuer, a World Cup winner and 12-time Bundesliga champion with Bayern, has played 19 times in the league this season, with the 37-year-old’s last appearance coming on 6 March.

Urbig, 22, has played eight league matches, including six starts, while Ulreich, 37, made his first appearance of the season on Saturday.

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Higgins beaten by teenager Moody in 2,000th match

Stan Moody held his nerve to clinch a 5-4 win over John Higgins at the World Open in the veteran’s 2,000th professional match.

Higgins, 50, fought back from 4-1 down to square the second-round contest against England’s Moody in Yushan, China.

But the 19-year-old, ranked 47th in the world, made a break of 65 in the deciding frame to knock out the four-time world champion.

“I watched John growing up and learning the game. To beat him in an important match out in China and to do it with a lot of breaks as well is a good feeling,” Moody told World Snooker.

“John is a class act. I knew if I let him back in he would come back, so I’m glad I managed to hold my nerve in the decider.”

Moody’s reward for the victory over defending champion Higgins is a third-round meting with Welshman Ryan Day.

Elsewhere at the Yushan Sport Centre, Masters champion Kyren Wilson eased to a 5-2 win over Lyu Haotian, while world number one Judd Trump cruised to a 5-1 success over Florian Nuessle.

World champion Zhao Xintong claimed a 5-4 victory over Chinese compatriot Long Zehuang.

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