A federal judge found probable cause the Trump administration willfully defied a court order on deportation flights to El Salvador. The contempt probe intensified this week as the judge presses for whistleblower and DOJ testimony on who ordered the flights and how the government responded.
That case, along with related questions about contempt referrals, DOJ follow-through, and the treatment of people sent to prisons abroad, are among the scenarios covered in Metaculus's U.S. Democracy Threat Index, a forecasting series we built with Bright Line Watch, a nonpartisan watchdog group. We just added a $10,000 prize pool to incentivize accurate forecasts.
Bright Line Watch is a nonpartisan group of political scientists from Dartmouth and other institutions who have monitored democratic norms since 2017. They selected 39 indicators across six areas: electoral integrity, political rights, civil liberties, rule of law, institutional checks and balances, and information integrity.
Each question asks whether a specific, observable event will occur during a two-year period. Historical data has been backfilled for 2021–2024 to provide base rates. Current forecasting periods are 2025–26 and 2027–28.
The index value is the average probability across all 39 questions. Higher values indicate greater predicted threat to democratic institutions; lower values indicate greater predicted resilience. As news breaks and forecasters update, the index moves (or doesn't), providing signal about which events actually affect institutional health.
$7,500 will be awarded based on prediction accuracy from December 12, 2025 onward.
$2,500 will be awarded based on periodic snapshots timed to coincide with Bright Line Watch's surveys of political scientists and the American public. This enables direct comparison between Metaculus forecasters and expert opinion.
The first snapshot is January 1, 2026, so forecasts should be submitted before then.