GAMING LAWYER PESSIMISTIC ON BARNEY'S BILL (Update)
25 September 2009
Little chance of success says specialist
gambling legal expert
The ambience at EiG may have been optimistic and even
buoyant regarding the future legalisation of online
gambling in the United States (see previous InfoPowa
reports) but it is apparently not shared by all the
experts.
Speaking at the International Masters of
Gaming Law conference in Amsterdam this week, the
respected Las Vegas-based online gambling legal expert
Tony Cabot appeared pessimistic on the prospects for
success of attempts to legalise online gambling and
poker by Congressman Barney Frank and Senator Robert
Menendez.
“Nothing is going to happen this
year,” Cabot predicted. “Barney Frank has already pushed
his [legislative proposal HR 2267] back, and once we get
into next year we will be into an election cycle. The
Democrats in particular are under a lot of stress at the
moment and the last thing the Democrats want to get
involved in is an unpopular fight because the
Republicans would be all over it.”
Cabot
assessed the chances of success for the bill at around 5
percent. “This is a move that will not come at the
federal level,” he said, implying that state initiatives
are more likely to succeed.
Cabot gave an
overview of recent moves in California and Massachusetts
to move the online gambling legalisation agenda forward,
but described these as having achieved 'scant progress'
so far.
Turning to the Menendez’s attempt to
legalise games with an element of skill such as poker,
backgammon and bridge, Cabot characterised this as
‘Harrah’s’ bill’ and commented that neither the Frank or
Menendez bills had the support of veteran Nevada Senator
and Democrat Majority Leader Harry Reid, and had also
met with varying degrees of enthusiasm from US land
gambling giant companies.
“There is a lack of
consensus,” he said. “The senior senator from Nevada
will not budge until there is a clear consensus on the
issue, and this is not present. Harrah’s want to push
this hard because they own the World Series of Poker.
[But] Steve Wynn... has hired lobbyists to go against
it.”
If the US did legalise online gambling it
was likely that operators who had never taken US bets
online, whom he described as 'clean' would be in a
better position to achieve licensing. Those who had
immediately exited the US market on the passing of the
UIGEA “...may or may not be able to get a license
depending on how this progresses”, he said.
Cabot
added a new possibility to the opposition mix, too - the
likelihood that large online poker firms like PokerStars
and Full Tilt, which have continued to offer their
services to US players in defiance of US legislation,
may attempt to kill the legalisation initiative,
realising they stood no chance of getting licenses and
would face increased legal US competition. These
companies had the resources to make such a threat
credible, he opined.
The legal expert raised the
interesting prospect of what he referred to as an unholy
coalition of cross party opposition to the legalisation
of online gambling.
“We have the conservative
republicans and the Ralph Nader Democrats who oppose the
bills – so it doesn’t even break on party lines. And one
thing we know about the United States is that it is a
lot easier to kill something than what it is to get
something passed,” he concluded.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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