Pollsters are like weathermen: They’re wrong as often as they’re right, but no one remembers. They just put out another prediction and get paid.

But bookies put their money where their mouths are, day in, day out. And on U.S. politics, they’re almost always spot on.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is the odds-on favorite to win the Republican nomination, according to OddsChecker.com, which claims to be “the foremost online betting odds comparison service.”

All 25 oddsmakers listed on the site put Bush at the top of the heap.

All 25 oddsmakers listed on the site put Bush at the top of the heap, some giving odds of 7 to 4, which means if you bet $4 you win $7. Others put him at 2 to 1.

Donald Trump, who is currently leading all the polls, is the second-best bet, coming in at 3 to 1, or a bit less, 11 to 4. And Florida Sen. Marco Rubio comes in third at 5 to 1, or a little better, 9 to 2. The odds drop off sharply from there for the rest of the candidates.

Ireland’s largest bookie, PaddyPower.com, list the candidates like this:

Jeb Bush 7/4
Donald Trump 3/1
Marco Rubio 6/1
Scott Walker 7/1
Ben Carson 8/1
John Kasich 11/1
Carly Fiorina 12/1
Rand Paul 18/1
Chris Christie 20/1
Mike Huckabee 25/1
Ted Cruz 25/1

Some of the others, like Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, have the same odds (40 to 1) as those not even running (such as former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry). Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin weighs in at 50 to 1 and, if you wanna make bank, put down $1,000 on former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger — you’ll win $100,000.

PaddyPower has been right on all the recent presidential elections.

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On the Democratic side, PaddyPower puts former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as a huge favorite (you’ve got to wager $11 just to win an extra $4). Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is at 4 to 1, Vice President Joe Biden at 5 to 1; and the rest are at 33 to 1 or worse (again, for the longshot, pick Alec Baldwin or Eva Longoria).

PaddyPower has been right on all the recent presidential elections. In fact, in 2008, the bookie paid off in October, weeks before the election, which would turn out to be a landslide loss for Arizona Sen. John McCain.

“Look, if this were a two-horse race, one horse would be so far in front that the horse in second place could hardly see him,” bookie spokesman Ken Robertson said in 2008. Days before that, the odds were so good for Obama, a wagerer had to bet $90 just to win $10.

As for the presidential election in November 2016, the odds are tight: Clinton at 11 to 8, Bush at 9 to 2. But again, you might want to drop a buck on the 1,000 to 1 longshot: Kim Kardashian. Hey, it could happen.