POLITICAL BUSINESS
6 April 2007
Getting U.S. politicians on your side can be an
expensive business.....
Online and more traditional land gambling interests
spend millions of dollars every year on lobbying
activities in the USA, claims the newspaper USA Today in
an article which appeared this week on political liaison
aimed at persuading politicians to see things your way.
Sources for this financial bonanza include online
gambling companies, land casino firms, Indian tribes and
horse racing collectives among others, and the newspaper
predicts that firms specialising in this lucrative field
of federal and state political influence will again
invest many millions in it this year.
The $25 million it is officially recognised the gaming
industry as a whole spent on lobbying in 2006 was a
slight increase over the previous year's total, but down
from the $28.5 million spent four years ago. Overall,
companies, associations and other groups spent $2.5
billion on lobbying in Washington last year, with the
pharmaceutical industry topping the charts at $166.5
million.
The spending came amid controversy over public
corruption scandals involving convicted former lobbyist
Jack Abramoff, who admitted to bilking wealthy American
Indian gambling casino tribes.
"Even though we didn't have anything to do with it, we
all tend to get labeled," said Frank Fahrenkopf Jr.,
president of the American Gaming Association, which
spent $900 000 last year lobbying on behalf of
commercial land casino interests.
Still, the gambling industry fared pretty well in
Washington, he said. And he expects casinos will do even
better this year because of a new cast of leaders in
Congress who understand the industry.
They include Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada
Democrat who has been a strong land casino advocate;
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Ways
and Means Committee; and Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., the
House Judiciary Committee chairman.
The industry also has Republican allies in powerful
posts, including Sen. John Ensign, a Nevada Republican,
who now heads the National Republican Senatorial
Campaign Committee.
Much of the [land] gambling industry's 2006 lobbying
centered on legislation to ban online betting. The
measure became law after former Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist attached it to an unrelated 'must-pass'
security bill passed late at night last year as Congress
was about to recess for mid-term elections.
Internet gambling supporters want lawmakers to reverse
the ban, or at least ensure that a proper investigation
into the regulation of online gambling is started before
some of the regulations go into effect this summer.
The article highlights the Poker Players' Alliance,
which lobbied heavily against the ban and recently hired
former New York senator and poker enthusiast Alfonse
D'Amato to lead the group's effort this year. D'Amato's
message to former colleagues: the U.S. government could
generate $3 billion in taxes a year if it regulated the
industry.
"There are millions of Americans who love poker and who
feel strongly their rights were taken away in the last
session," said Michael Bolcerek, president of the Poker
Players Alliance, which paid another lobbying firm $540
000 last year to work against the bill. "It's an
overreach of the federal government that needs to be
rectified."
USA Today also covers more recent developments involving
the attempted repeal of the UIGEA by Rep. Barney Frank,
chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, who
told The Financial Times recently that the Internet
gambling ban was one of the "stupidest" bills ever
passed.
"Meanwhile, two Nevada lawmakers, Reps. Shelley Berkley,
a Democrat, and Jon Porter, a Republican, are drafting a
proposal to study ways to regulate online gambling," the
article continues. "But gaming experts question whether
the issue will gain any traction."
"It's a subject the public cares somewhat about," said
Robin Hanson, an economics professor at George Mason
University who studies the gambling industry. "But
they're not overwhelmingly passionate about it."
Hanson says it's usually more difficult for Congress to
repeal anti-gambling measures than to pass them because
it's the kind of issue most politicians don't want to
promote. "Usually, the way gambling grows is by
neglect," he said.
Although efforts to ban off-reservation Indian casino
gambling died in Congress, the Interior Department is
considering regulations that could restrict development
of new Indian casinos on off-reservation sites. Dozens
of tribes who want to build casinos - in some cases
hundreds of miles from their reservations - are lobbying
against the rules. But many wealthy gaming tribes
support new regulations, saying the practice has led to
"reservation shopping."
Tribal governments are also monitoring the actions of
the National Indian Gaming Commission, which wants to
make bingo machines used in certain Indian casinos work
slower so they won't resemble Las Vegas-style slot
machines.
Despite the high-stakes measures affecting Indian
casinos that Congress considered last year, the $16
million that tribes spent on lobbying was about 25
percent less than they spent in 2003, according to the
Center for Responsive Politics. Experts attribute the
drop-off to the Abramoff scandal.
"Since the Abramoff scandal, they have taken more care
in selecting lobbyists to represent them," said Roger
Gros, editor of the magazine Global Gaming Business.
"They're much more selective on where they spend their
money."
Disappointingly, the article did not touch on the
notorious "exceptions" or "carve-outs" which
characterise U.S. political attempts to ban online
gambling. These have been a frequent element in lobbying
initiatives by the horse racing, state lotteries and
fantasy sports sector, where offline entities frequently
have protectionist agendas and seek to reserve online
gambling opportunities to themselves....and have the
lobbying will and wherewithal to pursue the advantage
through influencing US politicians.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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