FRANK: LATEST ACTION AGAINST PROCESSORS COULD BE
HELPFUL (Update)
26 June 2009
And more sponsors sign up for HR2267
The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee,
Democrat Congressman Barney Frank, said this week that
the recent seizure of millions of dollars in online
poker payments (see previous InfoPowa reports) only
strengthens his hand because it reminds voters and
politicians how sweeping - and potentially unclear - the
existing law is.
Speaking to the Washington DC
publication Politico, Franks said the action by the U.S.
attorney for the Southern District of New York in which
$34 million in processor accounts - payments to an
estimated 27 000 US poker players - could be helpful in
getting his HR2267 bill passed, legalising and
regulating online gambling in the United States.
Politico reports that even online gambling's chief
opponent, the Republican Representative from Alabama,
Spencer Bachus, believes Frank is holding much better
cards in the current Congress than he had in the last
one.
The publication quotes Bachus as saying:
“It’s going to be an uphill battle to stop it this time.
We caught them off guard last time. This time, they
won’t be off guard.”
Frank introduced legislation
last month that would create a licensing and regulatory
framework that would allow Americans to play poker and
place other bets on government-approved websites - a
move that has the potential to generate billions of
dollars in much-needed revenues for individual states or
the federal government.
Politico goes into some
detail on the machinations of Arizona Republican Senator
Jon Kyl and the then Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist -
a Tennessee Republican - in getting the ban on Internet
gambling financial transactions through Congress back in
2006.
The duo managed this by choosing a late
night session on the cusp of a congressional recess,
ramming the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act
through attached to a totally unrelated but "must pass"
port security bill. Before that there was a long history
of political manouevring by those for and against online
gambling in trying to ban the pastime - or prevent it
being banned.
Ever since the UIGEA passed into
law, costing overseas online gambling companies billions
in lost business and stock declines, the controversial
act and its difficult enforcement has been the subject
of political action and public debate.
Politico
comments that online gambling has been good for
Washington lobbyists, with many millions paid to
lobbying firms, and to campaign funds, by both sides.
The publication also points to the National Football
League, which helped turn key Democrats against Frank’s
bill last year to give the chairman a surprise defeat in
a vote on his own panel. But now Spencer Bachus and
other supporters of the online gambling ban fear the
league may be working with Frank on a compromise that
would uphold laws against sports betting whilst
liberalising other forms of online gambling.
The
recent bank seizures by the New York authorities are the
latest developments in the long-running online gambling
legalisation saga.
"The....seizures, which
targeted accounts managed by two companies that process
payments for online poker sites such as Poker Stars and
Full Tilt Poker thrust the issue back into the news and
renewed old questions about the clarity of the existing
law," reports Politico, revealing that Frank described
the move as "a terrible idea" last week.
Nevada
Republican Representative Shelley Berkely seems to agree
with the Financial Services Committee chairman; her
staff is drafting a formal response to the
administration, arguing that the seizure “shows the
inappropriate excess of government power.”
“People have a right to play poker in their homes,”
Shelley contends, “and the federal government doesn’t
have a right to enforce against that.”
A
spokesman for the Financial Services Committee told
Politico that the panel needs to hold a hearing on the
chairman’s bill before lawmakers would ever consider
formal legislation. And the committee has its hands full
this summer rewriting the regulatory infrastructure for
the country’s huge financial services industry.
"But Frank likes his odds coming out of the flop,"
Politico reports, quoting the politician as saying:
“We’ll get it done.”
Since the appearance of the
Politico article four more co-sponsors have signed on
for Congressman Frank's legislation. The latest signings
include California Representative Michael M. Honda;
Representative Ed Perimutter from Colorado; Texas
Representative Ciro D. Rodriguez and New Jersey
Representative Robert E. Andrews.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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