Will the US deport an American citizen before 2029?
85
Ṁ12k
2029
80%
chance

This market will resolve to YES if at least one verifiable case occurs where a person who was a U.S. citizen at the time (either by birth or naturalization) is deported from the United States before January 1, 2029.

The market will resolve to NO if no such deportation occurs before January 1, 2029.

  • A deportation case does not qualify if the individual has been denaturalized before deportation.

  • If a naturalized citizen commits fraud in the naturalization process but is deported while still recognized as a U.S. citizen, it will count.

  • A case where a qualifying individual is deported will resolve to YES even if a subsequent judicial order mandates that the individual be returned.

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How's this resolve if this scenario occurs

@Marnix I’d resolve YES in that case, because it’s the thinnest flimsiest justification for letting them deport Americans. They might equally say that everywhere on Earth is ‘part of America’s natural property, so transporting an American anywhere is not deportation’. That’s just them changing the meaning of ‘deportation’, and I’m not inclined to follow that.

I would be interested to see a numeric version of this market (how many American citizens .. )

opened a Ṁ1,000 YES at 75% order

How will the market resolve if a qualifying individual is deported but then the judiciary orders the individual be returned?

@RichSchumacher That will resolve as YES.

bought Ṁ42 YES from 51% to 53%

E.g., We saw a birthright US Citizen child deported with her parents and several siblings, some of which are also birthright citizens

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/rcna196049

See also

“she, her parents and four of her siblings were detained at a Border Patrol checkpoint in Texas and were subsequently removed from the US to Mexico following the parents’ decision to take their children with them rather than separate,”

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/15/us/parents-deported-mexico-daughter-cancer-treatment/index.html

@SusanneinFrance While despicable, the people who were actually deported were not citizens, and they merely took their citizen children with them. Like I said, it was a horrible thing to do, but not sufficient for this market.

bought Ṁ50 NO

If a naturalized citizen is deported due to fraud in the naturalization process or due to a serious crime that causes denaturalization, does that count as a deportation of a US citizen?

@spiderduckpig Denaturalization does not count for this (ie. if a citizen is denaturalized and then deported, this does not resolve YES). Deporting a naturalized citizen that committed fraud in the naturalization process would count though - they are still a citizen.