HomeGambling IndustryKalshi sanctions three congressional candidates for trading on themselves

Kalshi sanctions three congressional candidates for trading on themselves

ONLINE GAMBLING24 Apr 2026
3 min. read
Warning
  • Three political candidates in the US have been fined by Kalshi and suspended from the platform
  • Most of the candidates said that they had done nothing wrong, arguing that they had a different motivation than using some private knowledge to place a trade
  • Kalsh is keen to appear tough on people trading using non-publicly available knowledge

Fears over insider trading on platforms such as Kalshi are not without some justification.

A US soldier was arrested after investigators discovered that he had gambled on the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, and now Kalshi has named three candidates for Congress who had gambled on themselves, fining them and suspending their accounts.

Political candidates mostly unperturbed by fines

Skeptics have long argued that prediction markets could possibly lead to a lot of people with sensitive information abusing it to enrich themselves. Now, Kalshi has not hesitated to dispel qualms that it would be intimidated by an individual’s status in enforcing its transparency rules. The political candidates involved span the full political spectrum, too.

Among the people fined by Kalshi are Mark Moran, who is running as an independent candidate in the Virginia US Senate race, Ezekiel Enriquez, who runs from the Texas Republican primary for a US House seat, and Matt Klein, a Democratic state senator running for a US House seat in Minnesota.

Klein and Enriquez made trades of under $100 on themselves, whereas Moran shared on social media that he had wagered $100. While these actions were not done specifically to undermine the fairness of the races, Kalshi is eager to demonstrate that it stands prepared to act against individuals who possess specific non-public information about events.

None of the candidates would be able to place another trade with the platform over the next five years. In the meantime, Klein and Enriquez will have to pay $530 and $780 fines, part of a settlement with the platform, whereas Moran has refused to bargain and has been fined $6,200 instead.

Moran has spoken out against the fine and argued that Kalshi was aware that he was making a trade, having previously talked to the platform to let him have his name displayed on their platform.

It was part of his campaign, he explained, to draw attention to prediction markets and how they can have an unfair impact on the electoral process in the country. As to the size of his fine, Moran simply stated that he refused to comply with the platform’s demand and publish an apology on social media.

Know your enemy

Klein is in a little more delicate situation, as he is currently co-sponsoring a bill in Minnesota seeking to ban prediction markets.

The lawmaker argued that he simply had bet on himself to win the primary because he was interested in how the platform worked, and said that he did not believe there was a conflict between his co-sponsorship of the aforementioned bill and the fact that he had placed a trade to explore the platform.

While all three cases draw scrutiny, and Kalshi is right to stop people from trading on themselves, the fact remains that many suspicious trades still remain unchecked.


Image credit: Unsplash.com

TOPICS: Kalshi
24 Apr 2026
3 min. read
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