My guess is that you just don’t have any conditionals, but work them out from other markets.
Eg. One market on “Harris wins with X on the ticket”, one on “Harris looses with X on the ticket”, “Harris chooses X for VP” and so on. Then the chances of her winning, conditional on different candidates, can be worked out by comparing how these markets are doing.
My guess is that you just don’t have any conditionals, but work them out from other markets.
Eg. One market on “Harris wins with X on the ticket”, one on “Harris looses with X on the ticket”, “Harris chooses X for VP” and so on. Then the chances of her winning, conditional on different candidates, can be worked out by comparing how these markets are doing.