According to CoinDesk, with one month to go before the US election, prediction market Kalshi has been allowed to resume listing contracts for control of Congress. On Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected a motion by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to allow Kalshi to continue listing contracts.

Judge Patricia Millett said the CFTC failed to prove it or the public would suffer irreparable harm during its appeal and denied its motion to stay. Kalshi listed the contracts on Sept. 13, but trading was temporarily suspended after just a few hours.

Kalshi sued the CFTC last year for its refusal to approve election contracts, arguing that it constituted gambling and was not in the public interest. Judge Millett noted that the CFTC failed to prove irreparable harm and therefore could not obtain a stay.

While Kalshi is fighting the CFTC in court, its rival Polymarket has been banned from operating in the U.S., but it has seen record trading volumes of more than $1 billion during this year’s election. A Kalshi spokesman said no timetable has been set for resuming listing contracts, but it will be soon.

The CFTC is considering a ban on election betting rules on all futures exchanges. Judge Millett suggested that the CFTC could ban election contracts through a formal rule or proclamation.