IS THIS A PROTECTIONIST CLAUSE?
14 August 2009
Questions asked about clause in US online
gambling legislative proposals
Online gambling executives and industry observers alike
are asking whether a specific clause contained in two
legislative proposals aimed at legalising Internet poker
and gambling in the USA are signalling a protectionist
intent on the part of future US regulators.
Online gambling legalisation proposals by Senator Robert
Menendez (online poker) and Congressman Barney Frank
(online gambling) both contain the potentially
discriminatory clause, which allows the US Treasury to
reject applicants who have failed to file "...a federal
or state tax return…owed to a jurisdiction in which the
applicant operates or does business.”
Opinions
are split on the implications of the clause; some feel
that it is a clear indication that any legalisation in
the United States will result in only American operators
getting the lcensing green light, whilst others feel
that the inclusion is a political ploy designed to
appease possible opponents of the proposals. Others
still point out that there are a number of ways that
companies outside the United States could structure a US
presence that would pass muster.
Major non-US
operators have different views, too. Gigi Levy, CEO of
888.com is on record as saying that any US legalisation
will restrict licenses to American companies. Party
Gaming, which recently cleaned its US pre-UIGEA slate
with a massive "settlement" payment to the US
authorities, appears to think otherwise and has revealed
that it intends to continue US lobbying efforts.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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