THE AMBIVALENT SENATOR
30 March 2007
Online gambling's biggest opponent has a flexible
attitude to legislative add-ons, it seems
Arizona senator Jon Kyl has developed a reputation over
the years as a virulently anti-online gambling
politician prepared to use all manner of political
twists and turns in his quest to ban those variations of
Internet gambling which he regards as harmful and
immoral. These do not include his notorious exceptions
for horse racing, state lotteries and fantasy sports,
however.
This seeming ambivalence extends into the political
methods used to push legislation through Congress, it
appears from reports this week.
Kyl's involvement and enthusiastic support for the
Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act seemed to
indicate a wholehearted approval for the quaint US
political process whereby stalled legislation can be
pushed through Congress on the coat tails of urgent
bills, even though there is no relationship between the
two.
This was the method used by Senator Bill Frist to push
the UIGEA through a late night session of Congress just
before the last electioneering recess, attached to the
totally unrelated but "must pass" Safe Ports bill.
However, it appears from utterances this week in
Congress that Senator Kyl is nothing if not flexible
when it comes to issues that do not suit his point of
view. Speaking on a proposal to continue funding the war
in Iraq, the Senator opposed some provisions aimed at
setting a timetable for US withdrawal from the region.
At one point he criticised the bill because it has
unrelated spending items attached that wouldn't
otherwise pass.
According to the Congressional Record on the debate on
the US Troop Readiness, Veteran's Health and Iraq
Accountability Act 2007, the Senator is reported to have
said:
"It is amazing to me, and I won't get into all the pork
that is in this bill, but here we have a security
supplemental, emergency funding to support the troops,
and we decide to lard it up with all manner of items
that are not emergencies, have nothing to do with
supporting the troops, but because everybody knows this
is a must-pass bill, they figure this is a real good
opportunity for them to get things in the bill that
might otherwise be very difficult to pass in the
Congress."
That sounds very much like the UIGEA add-on last year,
which had equally little urgency or relevance to the
Safe Ports Act.
For the record, the sort of thing other politicians were
trying to attach to the military bill were to do with
appropriations for guided tours of the US Capitol; for
mine safety research; sugar beet and sugar cane funding
and a $100 million request for domestic security related
to the Republican and Democratic Presidential nominating
conventions....in 2008.
Kyl makes the point again as he concludes: "Do my
colleagues hear what I am saying? Politicians have
decided this is a good train to get on board because it
has to move, we have to fund the troops. Since it is
hard for us to get the Senate and the House to act on
these items otherwise, we will just try to attach them
to this bill."
"Political expediency" is a phrase that seems to just
about cover it, but this sort of ambivalence resulted in
billions of dollars of international investment and
business being lost in the UIGEA and its aftermath.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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