Despite a giant field of candidates, one candidate has all the attention from prediction markets heading into Tuesday’s Oklahoma Republican governor primary.
The race is shaping up like another stress test for President Donald Trump’s endorsement power, just like two other elections on Tuesday in Georgia and Alabama.
Trump-backed Mike Mazzei is trading like the clear favorite, up near 90% on both Kalshi and Polymarket. However, polling is still too close with nine candidates for a runoff to be out of the question. That means this one may end up being more about second-round consolidation than first-round results.
Prediction markets all in for Oklahoma governor
The market view is pretty straightforward: Mazzei has Trump’s endorsement, and traders are treating that as the main signal in a crowded field. But that hasn’t gone well for other Trump gubernatorial candidates in Iowa and South Carolina.
Even with only about $331,000 in trading volume on Kalshi and $434,000 on Polymarket, the pricing is still aggressive, suggesting the market thinks the endorsement is doing the heavy lifting.
That is exactly the kind of setup Trump likes in a primary, where his candidate starts with a built-in advantage before the final ballots even get counted. Still, the polling split is interesting, because when the market is strong and the polls are softer, the runoff question becomes the real story instead of the favorite’s margin.
Runoff risk is the real test
If this does go to a runoff, that is where the race becomes another test of Trump’s hold on the GOP primary electorate and how prediction markets will read it then.
Georgia’s Republican governor race and Alabama’s Senate runoff on Tuesday are both part of the same broader pattern: Trump’s endorsement still matters a lot. Those still weighed Trump’s influence heavily despite a few recent flops from his candidates.
That is why Oklahoma matters even if the market is already leaning hard toward Mazzei. A runoff would force the rest of the field to sort out where the anti-Mazzei and nonaligned votes go. That can change the picture quickly if the second-round electorate is less forgiving than the first.
The race might still end with Mazzei on top, but Tuesday could tell us whether the endorsement is a lock or just the starting point.
What the polls are saying
The polling is the piece that keeps this from feeling over before it starts. The race is much more open in the survey data than it is in the market. That is usually a sign that traders are seeing something the averages have not fully settled on yet.
Recent two-poll average of top-5 candidates:
- Mazzei – 24%
- Drummond – 21.5%
- Keating – 16.5%
- McCall – 13%
- Merrick – 9.5%
The polling does not mean traders are wrong. It does mean the favorite’s path is more dependent on turnout and runoff math than the current price suggests.
In other words, Oklahoma will help showcase how much Trump moves the field before voters have to make a final choice. If Mazzei stays above water on Tuesday, the market will have called it early. If the race gets dragged into a runoff, then the real test shifts to whether that early 90% pricing was a signal of strength or just an overconfident read on a messy primary.
What to watch moving forward
Traders clearly like Mazzei a lot, but the polling says the race is still messy enough to deserve attention. That combination usually means there is a favorite, but not necessarily a finished race.
If a runoff happens, it becomes one more data point in the broader Trump endorsement story this primary season. So far, that story has been strong in some places, less clean in others, and very dependent on the state.
Oklahoma looks like it belongs in the same bucket as the other Tuesday tests. Trump’s guy is ahead, prediction markets are comfortable with that, but the polling is split, and the final outcome may depend on whether the favorite can turn endorsement power into a true win.
