Kalshi Expands Government Relations With Office In D.C
Prediction market heavyweight Kalshi is pushing deeper into the heart of U.S. politics, announcing plans to open a Washington, D.C. office and recruit seasoned policy insiders from both sides of the aisle. The move signals a deliberate escalation in Kalshi’s engagement with lawmakers as prediction markets face mounting scrutiny ahead of the 2026 election cycle.
Kalshi confirmed the hiring of John Bivona, a former Biden administration official, as its head of federal government relations, alongside Blake Bee, a former Amazon senior manager who led state and local public policy efforts. Together, the hires give Kalshi direct experience navigating both federal agencies and state regulators at a time when its core business model is under the microscope.
In a statement, Kalshi's spokesperson emphasized that the company “acts as a neutral platform” and is actively engaging with policymakers and stakeholders to shape how event-based markets are understood and regulated in the U.S. The company has also indicated it is preparing for deeper involvement in policy discussions tied to the 2026 elections.
The expansion comes as prediction markets, including Kalshi and rival platform Polymarket, face legal challenges in at least four U.S. states over allegations of offering unlicensed sports betting. While a 2024 court ruling cleared the way for election-related event contracts, the broader regulatory environment remains fragmented and contentious.
Dominance in a Rapidly Growing Prediction Market
Kalshi enters Washington from a position of strength. According to Dune Analytics data from Jan. 12, the platform accounts for roughly two-thirds of all prediction market trading volume, cementing its status as the sector’s dominant player. The surge in activity followed legal clarity around election betting, drawing users seeking real-time market-based probabilities on political outcomes.
That dominance, however, has also made Kalshi a focal point for regulators and lawmakers concerned about the societal and political implications of betting on elections, public policy outcomes, and government stability. As prediction markets grow in scale and influence, questions around oversight, market manipulation, and public trust are becoming harder for policymakers to ignore.
The regulatory push coincides with heightened market activity tied to looming political events. With U.S. lawmakers racing to pass a funding bill before a Saturday midnight deadline, Kalshi users were pricing in a 78% chance of a government shutdown at the time of publication. Polymarket showed similar odds, reflecting growing pessimism over bipartisan negotiations.
Democrats have been pressing for changes to Department of Homeland Security funding, particularly around Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol operations in major U.S. cities. The standoff has revived memories of October’s 43-day shutdown — the longest in U.S. history — underscoring how prediction markets are increasingly tracking, and potentially amplifying, political risk in real time.
Kalshi’s expansion into Washington suggests the company is no longer content to simply list political outcomes — it wants a seat at the table where the rules governing those markets are written. Whether that strategy secures long-term legitimacy or invites tighter scrutiny may define the future of prediction markets in the U.S.