Sat. Nov 16th, 2024
UW professors: Gambling on politics trivializes our choice

Speculation about President Joe Biden’s future as the Democratic nominee for U.S. president is seemingly everywhere: cable television, podcasts, social media and — perhaps unexpectedly — overseas sports betting websites.







Allison M. Prasch

Allison M. Prasch








Jason Kido Lopez

Jason Kido Lopez




After the first 2024 presidential debate, many of these websites offered wagers about whether Biden would stay in the race.

As scholars of political communication and sports media at UW-Madison, we study how online betting platforms usually associated with sports frame U.S. presidential elections.

In our study of the 2020 and 2024 elections, we have found that the bets are more than just ways for people to play with or profit from politics. The bets also highlight distinct aspects of the electoral process and reflect people’s understanding of those elections.

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And while people engage with these games for different reasons, these bets flatten and simplify important electoral issues. Consider some of the bets offered by one platform before the recent presidential debate:

  • “Will Donald Trump or Joe Biden curse on air?”
  • “Will Joe Biden’s age be mentioned during the debate?”
  • “Will the debate include a question about climate change?”

Bookies don’t expect president to leave

Though betting on sports has been federally legalized in the U.S., American sports-betting companies are not permitted to offer bets on political events.







Betting on politics

Overseas websites offer elaborate bets on election campaigns — with bad odds for democracy.




But sports-betting companies housed outside of American borders offer wagers on who will clinch a party’s presidential nomination and which candidate will win the election. These bets also extend to presidential debates, affording participants the option to predict a candidate’s tie color or who will be the first to take a drink of water.

These bets are organized into a menu, and gamblers can choose which bets to wager on and how much money to risk. Each selection is assigned odds, which simultaneously communicate the payout of a winning bet and its probability. Options marked with a negative sign are more likely to occur and earn less money. A positive sign denotes the selection will collect more money because it is less likely to occur.

For instance, overseas sports-betting companies such as BetOnline.ag are offering bets on whether Biden will step aside before the Democratic National Convention. Each option carries different risk and therefore profit.

These odds change regularly, but on July 8, a winning bet that Biden will withdraw would pay out $3 for every $1 wagered — a win of $2. Every $1 bet that he won’t step aside would deliver $1.33, a win of just $0.33. So the website, has taken a financial stance that Biden is more likely to stay in the race.

The bets offered are based on the political context. During the 2020 U.S. presidential election, some of the most memorable wagers focused on two issues that defined the political moment: the COVID-19 pandemic and widespread conversations about race and racism.

Sites make money regardless of results

The first 2020 presidential debate took place Sept. 29 in the midst of a global pandemic. U.S. officials had mandated the use of masks in 33 states and on public transportation.

Despite the advice of his own administration’s experts, Trump held large rallies. In contrast, Biden hosted virtual meetings or small, socially distanced events with mostly journalists. Where Trump poked fun at those who wore a mask, Biden argued that doing so was part of people’s “responsibilities as an American.”

It was in this context that two sites asked bettors to place wagers on whether the candidates would appear in masks onstage at the debate.

One put the chances that Biden would wear a mask at 69.2% and that he wouldn’t at 36.4%. Trump’s odds were set at 20% that he would and 87.5% that he wouldn’t. The probabilities don’t add up to 100% because the betting sites set odds to maximize profit regardless of which outcome actually happens.

These odds not only reflected how each candidate spoke about and embodied competing attitudes toward mask-wearing and public health, but also simplified what is a complex scientific and political issue down to two “yes” or “no” propositions to be wagered on.

2020 featured bets on ‘Proud Boys,’ race

Throughout the 2020 presidential campaign, betting websites featured numerous wagers predicting how Trump and Biden would talk about race. What they could not have predicted was that the sitting president would directly address white supremacists during the first debate.

When Biden asked Trump to denounce the Proud Boys, a far-right white supremacist organization, Trump responded: “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by.” Instead of condemning the group, the president effectively told the Proud Boys — and other white supremacist organizations — to be at the ready.

True to form, sports-betting companies capitalized on this exchange. For the second debate, Mybookie.ag asked bettors to consider whether or not Biden would refer to some of Trump’s statements. These included wagers over whether Biden would say “Proud Boys” (Yes: 40.8%) or “racist” (Yes: 75%).

The gambling websites predicted it was fairly likely Biden would address Trump’s statements from the earlier debate at some point. Yet the sites reduced the topic to the question of whether Biden would simply mention the Proud Boys and admonish Trump with name-calling.

Wagers reflect superficial nature of campaigns

Four years later, overseas betting websites continue to distill important political issues — such as whether Biden should remain in the race — down to simple and discrete events.

It is perhaps unsurprising that websites usually dedicated to sports betting don’t treat elections with nuance or depth. But it is important to consider where and how essential national conversations are being held.

Though people may gamble for different reasons and with different levels of political engagement, these sites reflect a flattened and polar way of understanding the contemporary political moment. That’s not to say that the websites can or should do otherwise.

But it is worth reflecting on whether it is helpful to the democratic process to have yet another representation of U.S. elections as superficial, binary and contentious.

Prasch is an associate professor of rhetoric, politics and culture at UW-Madison. Lopez is an assistant professor of media and cultural studies at UW-Madison. They wrote this for The Conversation.

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