BIG DAY FOR BARNEY (Update)
4 December 2009
House Financial Services Committee hearings
start midmorning tomorrow
The next step in Congressman Barney Frank's latest
attempt to legalise online gambling in the United States
takes place mid-morning tomorrow - December 3rd 2009 -
when he chairs a hearing by the House Financial Services
Committee in Washington DC.
The hearing will be
streamed live from the Committee's website and can be
accessed at
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/hr_112409.shtml
.
Experts on existing technologies and their
application in the fields of online security and
consumer safety are expected to testify, hopefully
exploding some of the inaccurate myths that
anti-Internet gambling politicians have used in the past
to oppose legalisation.
With the recent
postponement to June 2010 of the UIGEA regulations (see
previous InfoPowa reports) it is likely that the main
focus will be on the legalisation issue, although two
bills are due for discussion, the Internet Gambling
Regulation, Consumer Protection, and Enforcement Act (HR
2267), which seeks to legalise, regulate and tax online
gambling, and the Reasonable Prudence in Regulation Act
(HR2266), which originally sought to delay the
implementation of the UIGEA regulations by 12 months.
Online gambling advocacy groups such as the Safe and
Secure Internet Gambling Initiative and the
million-strong Poker Players Alliance will have
representatives at the hearing, where most of the
Committee's 41 Democrats and 29 Republicans are expected
to attend.
This week the PPA launched a new
initiative to persuade voters to contact their political
representatives and again urge them to support the bills
at the hearings.
"I think we have 60 000 to 100
000 members who reside in the Financial Services
Committee districts," PPA executive director John Pappas
commented earlier this week. "We need to make sure those
voters continue telling their lawmakers to attend
meetings and support their right to play."
Pro-online gambling supporters will no doubt again see
veteran anti-Internet gambling politicians opposing any
changes in the status quo, probably led by Alabama
Republican Spencer Bachus, the Republican leader in the
committee, along with Arizona Republican Senator Jon Kyl.
"The PPA and our membership have done a good job
elevating this issue with hundreds of thousands of phone
calls and letters to Capitol Hill in 2009," Pappas said.
"We think this deserves attention and we hope we can
manage the debate at the hearing so those who ultimate
oppose us will be neutralised with the facts."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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