ONLINE GAMBLING BILL IS BIG NEWS (Update)
8 May 2009
Updated analysis estimates regulation will
generate up to $63 billion in new government revenue
over ten years
A press release earlier this week (see previous InfoPowa
report) that US House Financial Services chairman Barney
Frank was to host a press conference Wednesday morning
on his imminent attack on the UIGEA generated massive
mainstream media coverage internationally, showing that
the battle for the liberation of online gambling in the
United States continues to draw considerable interest.
Support for Congressman Frank's proposal to overturn
the UIGEA came immediately from the pressure group Safe
and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative, which issued a
statement updating the financial benefits of regulating
and taxing US Internet gambling. A SSIGI spokesman said
that a recent analysis had shown that collecting taxes
on regulated Internet gambling would allow the U.S. to
capture between $48.6 billion to $62.7 billion in new
revenue over the next decade, a 21 percent increase from
previous estimates.
SSIGI spokesman Jeffrey
Sandman said that Congressman Frank's proposal would
establish an enforcement framework for licensed gambling
operators to accept online wagers from individuals in
the U.S.
"The legislation is expected to include
a number of significant consumer protections, including
safeguards against compulsive and underage gambling,
money laundering, fraud and identity theft," said
Sandman. "Millions of Americans are wagering more than
$100 billion annually with offshore Internet gambling
operators despite the current prohibition imposed under
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006
(UIGEA)," he added.
Sandman said the SSIGI
applauded Frank's strong leadership to advance a common
sense approach to regulate Internet gambling and reverse
the intrusive, ineffective and burdensome prohibition.
"Rather than tell Americans what they can and cannot
do online in the privacy of their homes, Chairman
Frank's approach to regulate Internet gambling would
protect consumers and allow the U.S. to generate
billions in new revenue to fund critical government
programs. We hope all interested parties will unite to
support Congressman Frank to help advance this important
legislation. Americans continue to gamble online. It is
time for Congress to regulate and tax Internet
gambling," he concluded.
During the 110th
Congress, Chairman Frank introduced the Internet
Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act of 2007. A
companion piece of legislation introduced by Rep. Jim
McDermott (D-WA), the Internet Gambling Regulation and
Tax Enforcement Act of 2008, would help capture revenues
that are currently lost to offshore gambling operators.
Representatives of the financial services
industry, including the Chamber of Commerce and
Financial Services Roundtable, have expressed concerns
about the burden and ambiguity in the rules to implement
UIGEA which require the financial services sector to
identify and block unlawful Internet gambling
transactions (see previous InfoPowa reportage).
Bloomberg, along with other major news sources, reported
on the new Frank initiative, noting that it has support
from influential companies such as Youbet.com Inc. and
Harrah’s Entertainment Inc., in addition to the Poker
Players Alliance, a million member organisation formed
to overturn the UIGEA.
The service recalled that
online gambling operations, banks, state lotteries and
poker aficionados have previously opposed the UIGEA
without success. Some critics had criticised the law for
making no clear distinction between legal and illegal
online wagering, creating problems from the financial
services industry burdened with its enforcement. For
example, some states such as California allow lottery
tickets to be purchased online, and the ban doesn’t
affect online betting on horse racing.
Harrah’s
registered to lobby for the first time and spent $405
087 from January to March '09, the Bloomberg report
revealed. To supplement its in-house lobbyists, the
gambling giant hired veteran Democratic fundraiser Tony
Podesta.
Harrah Vice President Jan Jones said
regulating and taxing online gambling might swell
government coffers by $2 billion to $6 billion annually.
“At a time where there is no money, that can be going to
health care or S-CHIP,” the children’s insurance
program, Jones said.
California-based Youbet
hired its own lobbyist to push for legalised online
gambling, according to CEO Michael Brodsky. He said the
company would expand into online poker and other
Internet gambling if Congress permitted it.
“Our
customers would love to do more and we would love to
offer our customers more,” said Brodsky. “There’s a big
opportunity to do something that makes sense for
everyone. It’s a very nice revenue-raiser at a time when
everyone is looking to plug the holes.”
The
Poker Players Alliance has engaged with another
specialist outside firm and boosted its lobbying budget.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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