These two prediction markets examine the likelihood of two prominent Democratic figures securing their party's 2028 presidential nomination. Clinton's market asks whether the former First Lady, Senator, and Secretary of State will lead the Democratic ticket, while Clooney's market addresses whether the actor and political activist will become the nominee. Both markets are pricing the same underlying event—the 2028 Democratic nomination—but from two different candidacy angles. Since only one candidate can win any party's nomination, these markets are mutually exclusive outcomes within the broader 2028 Democratic field. Both markets are currently priced at 1% YES, indicating traders assign similarly low probabilities to either outcome. This identical pricing is notable and suggests the market collectively views both candidates as unlikely nominees relative to other potential Democratic candidates. The 99% implied probability of "neither Clinton nor Clooney" winning reflects trader consensus that the field includes more conventionally positioned candidates or emerging figures. The 1% level is not negligible—it implies roughly a 1-in-100 chance for each. Whether this reflects genuine possibility or represents minimal residual probability is a key interpretive question for market observers. Although these markets are mutually exclusive at the nomination stage, their prices could diverge significantly based on independent news flows. A Clinton announcement or strong signals about her interest would likely move her market upward, potentially without immediately moving Clooney's odds downward if traders view them as fundamentally different candidates with separate supporter bases. Conversely, Clooney mobilizing endorsements or infrastructure might lift his odds without affecting Clinton's market. The markets can and will likely move independently until—if—one candidate makes a definitive commitment to run or decisively withdraws interest. Several factors will drive movement in both markets going forward. Direct candidate statements about 2028 intentions carry outsized weight; any explicit declaration of candidacy or retirement from consideration would trigger sharp repricing. Polling data from early primary states will become increasingly influential as 2026 progresses. Party establishment support—endorsements from major Democratic figures and institutions—can shift market expectations rapidly. Campaign infrastructure announcements, such as hiring senior strategists or launching exploratory committees, serve as concrete evidence of seriousness. Finally, macroeconomic conditions, major legislative achievements or failures by the Biden administration, and unexpected political developments could reshape the entire Democratic primary landscape and reweight all candidate odds.