Trader consensus leans heavily toward "No" at 63% for the Italy judicial reform referendum, driven by historical precedent of low turnout invalidating similar votes, as seen in the 2022 justice referendum with just 20.9% participation. The Constitutional Court admitted four abrogative questions on May 16, 2024—targeting abuse-of-office crimes, judicial career separation, CSM elections, and pretrial detention—but recent polls show weak public awareness and enthusiasm amid competing priorities. Meloni's government opposes the measure, urging abstention to deny quorum, while promoters from Radicali Italiani and allies push signature verification ahead of a likely 2025 ballot. Absent a turnout surge, validity remains unlikely per trader assessments.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$128,720 Vol.
$128,720 Vol.
$128,720 Vol.
$128,720 Vol.
This market will resolve to “Yes” if the Italian judicial reform constitutional referendum (Nordio Reform Referendum), or a substantively equivalent referendum on the same constitutional amendments, is approved by a majority of valid votes cast in the nationwide referendum currently expected to be held in March 2026. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No.”
If the referendum is officially rescheduled, the same rule applies to the new ballot and its corresponding deadlines. This market will resolve to “No” if no qualifying referendum approving the judicial reform is passed by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET.
The resolution source will be based on the official certified referendum results as published by the Italian Ministry of the Interior or an equivalent official Italian government authority. Subsequent litigation, administrative challenges, or failure of any post-approval implementation steps will not be considered.
Market Opened: Jan 7, 2026, 5:32 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to “Yes” if the Italian judicial reform constitutional referendum (Nordio Reform Referendum), or a substantively equivalent referendum on the same constitutional amendments, is approved by a majority of valid votes cast in the nationwide referendum currently expected to be held in March 2026. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No.”
If the referendum is officially rescheduled, the same rule applies to the new ballot and its corresponding deadlines. This market will resolve to “No” if no qualifying referendum approving the judicial reform is passed by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET.
The resolution source will be based on the official certified referendum results as published by the Italian Ministry of the Interior or an equivalent official Italian government authority. Subsequent litigation, administrative challenges, or failure of any post-approval implementation steps will not be considered.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus leans heavily toward "No" at 63% for the Italy judicial reform referendum, driven by historical precedent of low turnout invalidating similar votes, as seen in the 2022 justice referendum with just 20.9% participation. The Constitutional Court admitted four abrogative questions on May 16, 2024—targeting abuse-of-office crimes, judicial career separation, CSM elections, and pretrial detention—but recent polls show weak public awareness and enthusiasm amid competing priorities. Meloni's government opposes the measure, urging abstention to deny quorum, while promoters from Radicali Italiani and allies push signature verification ahead of a likely 2025 ballot. Absent a turnout surge, validity remains unlikely per trader assessments.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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