Republicans Seek to “Restore” an Online Gambling Ban that Never Existed

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August 20, 2014

[h=1]Republicans Seek to “Restore” an Online Gambling Ban that Never Existed[/h] [h=2]Michelle Minton[/h] [h=5]8/19/2014 4:51:00 PM - Michelle Minton[/h]




Republicans generally oppose federal encroachment on policy matters traditionally left to the states. SO why is Rep. Ted Poe (R-Tex) alone among his GOP House colleagues in opposing a federal online gambling ban that would preempt state laws, reward special interests, and curtail an otherwise lawful pastime enjoyed by many Americans?
The Restoration of America’s Wire Act (RAWA, S. 2159, H.R. 4301), sponsored by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT), would rewrite the Federal Wire Act of 1961 to criminalize all “wire” communications related to gambling and overturn the laws of several states that have legalized online gambling within their borders. The Wire Act prohibits using a “wire communication facility for the transmission … of bets or wagers or information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers on any sporting event or contest.” [Emphasis added]


The bill’s supporters claim the original intent of the 1961 Act was to ban all forms of gambling over the nation’s communications systems. Thus, they decry what they see as the Department of Justice’s 2011 reinterpretation that the Act as applies to gambling on sports only. Actually, the Obama Justice Department restored the original understanding of the Wire Act. It was Clinton’s DOJ that first reinterpreted the Wire Act to apply to Internet gambling and Bush’s DOJ that in 2002 reinterpreted the Wire Act to prohibit all forms of online gambling.


The Wire Act was first enacted to address growing concerns over organized crime using the nation’s “race wire” to take bets on horse races and fund illicit activities. In 1961 it passed largely at the urging of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, who saw organized crime as a national problem that “knows no state lines.” Kennedy believed the only way to get at “kingpins of the rackets” was federal legislation targeting the source of the Mob’s money—including from illicit gambling”—the “primary source of its growth.” Out of Kennedy’s efforts came a package of bills, including what we now know as the Wire Act.


Backers of the Graham/Chaffetz proposal argue that the Wire Act was meant to prohibit all gambling because not every mention of gambling in the bill is modified by the phrase “sporting event or contest.” However, as the DOJ noted in 2011 it makes little sense for the authors of the authors of the bill to include the redundant phrase “sporting events and contests” throughout the bill’s text if the intent was to prohibit all gambling. There is also considerable evidence in statements made by the bill’s architect, Robert F. Kennedy, as well as his staff and members of Congress considering the bill that it was limited to sports betting.


For example, Kennedy, testifying at a May 1961 House hearing on the Wire Act, focused entirely on wagering related to horse racing and “such amateur and professional sports events as baseball, basketball, football and boxing,” without mentioning other forms of betting as falling under the Act. Moreover, the other bills in Kennedy’s anti-racketeering package carefully detailed the types of gambling they covered. For example, the Interstate Transportation of Wagering Paraphernalia Act defines wagering as bookmaking, wagering pools with respect to a sporting event, numbers games, policy games, bolita, or “similar games.”


Furthermore, during Senate hearings considering the Wire Act the Chairman, renowned anti-crime crusader Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.) questioned the wisdom of limiting the bill to sports gambling, asking why the feds “do not apply the bill to any kind of gambling activities, number rackets, and so forth?” Assistant Attorney General Herbert J. Miller responded that “the type of gambling that a telephone is indispensable to is wagers on a sporting event or contest” and clarified that when it comes to “gambling other than a sporting event or contest,” the bill “would not cover that because it is limited to sporting events or contests.”


The Wire Act only references bets and wagers on sporting events or contests. This clear language and other evidence makes clear that the Wire Act was always intended to exclusively apply to sports gambling and meant to assist the states in enforcing their laws—not preempt them.


So why has only one Republican been willing to speak out against it while a number of supposed states’ rights supporters have co-signed? Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that the proposal was written by a billionaire GOP donor—casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, who has promised to do “whatever it takes” to stop online gambling from being legalized, even if it means pushing online gambling back into the black market and nullifying democratically enacted state laws.

RAWA is a bad bet. Republicans should abandon it and follow Rep. Poe’s example.
 

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Should be a State issue. Federal Government has far too many important issues to deal with than this. This site is a gambling forum so I would imagine that everyone here has an out. Also I am pretty sure there may be only a handful of people here who gamble for a living.
 

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Republicans generally oppose federal encroachment on policy matters traditionally left to the states.

- good stuff

i'll have to email ms minton to thank her for my morning laugh
 

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Worse thing the Republicans ever did to me was to attach anti-gambling measure to the War refunding Bill @2007. I'll never forget
Bill Frist & Goodlatte of Virginia ruining everything. Sometimes I wonder why I still vote Republican.
 

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Worse thing the Republicans ever did to me was to attach anti-gambling measure to the War refunding Bill @2007. I'll never forget
Bill Frist & Goodlatte of Virginia ruining everything. Sometimes I wonder why I still vote Republican.
Any time they attach a bill is bull shit. Any bill.
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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The worst of the worst, attaching bullshit to even bigger bullshit. It's what the founders tried to avoid, but idiots will be idiots, saving mankind with idiocy

As for gambling legislation, not only us it a state's rights issue, it's just not very important with respect to good government. And such legislation is very much a bipartisan issue. Did Barry Harry and Nancy do anything when they had the chance?

Of course not
 

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So should generational welfare families.
 

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I think that gambling should be legalized in all shapes and sizes and the states would benefit from it financially as would the federal gov't.
 

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So was slavery. So was 3/5 of a vote. So was Prohibition. The Constitution was designed to change with the times.


So you think that a pillar of the First Amendment to the Constitution should be outlawed?

You should be very proud to be represented by a party that saw a constitutional right for a woman to kill the unborn child festering in her womb.
 

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So you think that a pillar of the First Amendment to the Constitution should be outlawed?

You should be very proud to be represented by a party that saw a constitutional right for a woman to kill the unborn child festering in her womb.

Lobbying in it's current form, otherwise known as Bribery, should be Outlawed. Like other things in the Constitution, the Founders would be appalled at how their words have been misinterpreted. Far cry from "right to petition the government for redress of grievances".
I'm fine with whatever party and person allows a woman to choose what she does with her own body.
 

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If you choose to strip away your foundation, you have no foundation. The constitution was not designed to change based on anybody's whims or emotion of the day, it was designed to withstand the test of time. It was a remarkable piece of legislation that's being systematically destroyed by modern day liberalism.

The forefathers specifically restricted the power of government, especially the federal government. To suggest modern day liberal policies are empowered by the constitution is mindblowingly out of touch.
 

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Liberals have to argue the constitution was intended to change, which is actually proving our arguments on many different levels
 

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Liberals have to argue the constitution was intended to change, which is actually proving our arguments on many different levels

Well according to Thomas Jefferson and the Supreme Court it was intended to change...

"I am certainly not an advocate for frequent and untried changes in laws and constitutions. I think moderate imperfections had better be borne with; because, when once known, we accommodate ourselves to them, and find practical means of correcting their ill effects. But I know also, that laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also, and keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy, as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors...[it] will be said it is easier to find faults than to amend [the Constituion]. I do not think...amendment so difficult as is pretended. Only lay down true principles, and adhere to them inflexibly"

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Dude was smarter than you and he lived without a computer and Google.
 

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Who is the "ban gambling" constituency anyway?

If you would cast a vote based on that issue you need your head examined.
 

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Well according to Thomas Jefferson and the Supreme Court it was intended to change...

"I am certainly not an advocate for frequent and untried changes in laws and constitutions. I think moderate imperfections had better be borne with; because, when once known, we accommodate ourselves to them, and find practical means of correcting their ill effects. But I know also, that laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also, and keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy, as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors...[it] will be said it is easier to find faults than to amend [the Constituion]. I do not think...amendment so difficult as is pretended. Only lay down true principles, and adhere to them inflexibly"

----------------------------------------------------

Dude was smarter than you and he lived without a computer and Google.

None of your crackpot left wing beliefs are remotely constitutional or legal, especially the executive and judicial activist crap you advocate. If they were, there would be a constitutional amendment for every last one.

Your only saving grace is the fact enough brainwashed spineless lemmings like you 'choose' tyranny in the name of the "common good" (or so you are told).

The framers would have been shooting by now.
 

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"I trust the government because it is run by educated people making intelligent, informed decisions!" -- aaaktard

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