Most people who read a teleprompter for a living earn a decent salary and zero insider-trading allegations. According to sources cited by ABC News, a White House teleprompter operator reportedly used advance knowledge of Trump’s prepared remarks to place bets on speech-related prediction markets — and allegedly cleared more than $100,000. The platform in question: Kalshi, a CFTC-regulated exchange where you can wager on everything from Fed rate decisions to presidential policy announcements. Think of it as DraftKings for political junkies, except the stakes involve real policy and real money.
What We Know So Far
The key details remain partially unverified, but the outline is damning enough to draw congressional attention.
- The alleged trader served as a White House teleprompter operator with access to prepared presidential remarks
- Reported profit: more than $100,000, according to sources cited by ABC News
- Kalshi’s surveillance team reportedly “promptly flagged and referred these trades” and says the company is cooperating with regulators — though this claim has not been independently verified
- The White House reportedly warned staff in March 2026 against using nonpublic information to trade prediction markets, per ABC News and subsequent reporting
- The House Oversight Committee has opened an inquiry into anti-insider-trading safeguards at both Kalshi and Polymarket — including scrutiny of a surveillance app used to monitor trading activity
The Enforcement Gap Nobody Planned For
Guardrails rarely arrive before the scandal does — and prediction markets are learning that lesson in real time.
The CFTC issued guidance in February 2026 asserting its authority to police illegal trading on registered exchanges. Kalshi and Polymarket both subsequently announced new anti-insider-trading measures — employment verification, account screening, and whistleblower tools. The platforms argue they can self-police effectively. Critics and regulators see political markets as uniquely vulnerable to informational advantage, the kind that no algorithm detects until the damage is done — a pattern of criminal networks outpacing governments seen across financial crime.
Expect tighter pre-trade screening, expanded employment checks, and possible CFTC rulemaking targeting event contracts specifically. The uncomfortable truth is this: the most dangerous insider isn’t running a hedge fund. It’s the person holding the script.




























