LOBBYING LUCRE
29 February 2008
PPA and NFL spend the big bucks - for different
outcomes
The US legislation requiring political lobbying
companies to declare budgets given to them by interested
parties threw up more revealing information....and big
money, this week.
Covington and Burling LLP took in almost $1.1 million
from the National Football League in 2007 to lobby the
federal government.
The firm lobbied on various pieces of legislation
including those dealing with steroids use, Internet
gambling, and disability and retirement benefits,
according to the form posted online Feb. 21 by the
Senate's public records office. $655 000 of that was
spent in the second half of the year. There was no
itemised breakdown of which issues received the most
budget.
Not far behind the NFL was the Poker Players' Alliance,
a pressure group based in Washington and dedicated to
legalising online poker, which spent $900 000 in 2007 to
lobby the federal government on online gambling
legislation.
The group, which says it represents 800 000 poker
enthusiasts nationwide, lobbied on a bill that would
exempt poker from a law that restricts online gambling,
and for legislation that would regulate the Internet
gaming industry, according to a disclosure form posted
online February 15 by the Senate's public records
office. The alliance spent $780 000 lobbying on those
issues in the second half of 2007.
It's legal to play poker online, but the Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 made it
illegal for US domestic banks and credit-card companies
to process payments to online gambling businesses. The
act bars financial institutions from handling gambling
transactions, with discriminatory exceptions for online
lotteries, horse racing and fantasy sports.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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