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- Jan 14, 2008
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Fahrenkopf claims he can’t remember a time when there was “as much animosity between the two political parties.” Fahrenkopf was chairman of the Republican National Committee for most of the Reagan years, so he knows how Washington works (or doesn’t work).
Fahrenkopf, like most (but not all) of the AGA membership, champions a federal plan to regulate the US online gambling market. Things weren’t always thus. Formed in 1995, the AGA’s official position was from the start adamantly opposed to all online gambling; ostensibly on the grounds that the technology didn’t exist to adequately prohibit minors from accessing the sites. But the AGA did an about face in March 2010, and has been playing the federal regulation card ever since.
That mission gained a new urgency this December, when the US Department of Justice dropped its new opinion that limited the scope of the 1961 Wire Act and opened up the door for state lotteries to offer non-Sports Betting forms of online gambling. Fahrenkopf believes “it was the right decision. To believe that anyone in Congress in 1961… ever thought there would be an ubiquitous world wide web, I mean, it’s just ridiculous.”
But Fahrenkopf cautions that this “was not a decision of the United States Supreme Court. This was the decision of the Obama justice department, which overruled a decision of three other presidents’ justice departments. It tries to clarify – and, I think, properly clarify — what the law is, but it’s not the law of the land by any means.”
Worse, Fahrenkopf believes that if the states were allowed to each go their own way, the result would be “a patchwork of laws” that would result in a “race to the bottom” (the not-at-all-overly-pejorative soundbite Nevada-based federal backers seem to have agreed upon). In Fahrenkopf’s view, this downward spiral means “states would try to limit what they were doing for consumer protection … to try and attract the business to come to their state.”
Scare tactics aside, Fahrenkopf recognizes that the tenth amendment to the US constitution – the one that guarantees states the rights to determine gambling questions for themselves – is something “jealously guarded by every state.” To ease their concerns, Fahrenkopf sketches a picture of a “uniform system … where the federal government might license and regulate native American tribes — because they’re sovereign nations and would never submit to the jurisdiction of a state government — and delegating to states that have the wherewithal, the experience to regulate. [These states] would be the ones licensing, regulating and taxing online gaming companies.” (Translation: let Nevada handle it.)
SOURCE CALVINAYRE
Fahrenkopf, like most (but not all) of the AGA membership, champions a federal plan to regulate the US online gambling market. Things weren’t always thus. Formed in 1995, the AGA’s official position was from the start adamantly opposed to all online gambling; ostensibly on the grounds that the technology didn’t exist to adequately prohibit minors from accessing the sites. But the AGA did an about face in March 2010, and has been playing the federal regulation card ever since.
That mission gained a new urgency this December, when the US Department of Justice dropped its new opinion that limited the scope of the 1961 Wire Act and opened up the door for state lotteries to offer non-Sports Betting forms of online gambling. Fahrenkopf believes “it was the right decision. To believe that anyone in Congress in 1961… ever thought there would be an ubiquitous world wide web, I mean, it’s just ridiculous.”
But Fahrenkopf cautions that this “was not a decision of the United States Supreme Court. This was the decision of the Obama justice department, which overruled a decision of three other presidents’ justice departments. It tries to clarify – and, I think, properly clarify — what the law is, but it’s not the law of the land by any means.”
Worse, Fahrenkopf believes that if the states were allowed to each go their own way, the result would be “a patchwork of laws” that would result in a “race to the bottom” (the not-at-all-overly-pejorative soundbite Nevada-based federal backers seem to have agreed upon). In Fahrenkopf’s view, this downward spiral means “states would try to limit what they were doing for consumer protection … to try and attract the business to come to their state.”
Scare tactics aside, Fahrenkopf recognizes that the tenth amendment to the US constitution – the one that guarantees states the rights to determine gambling questions for themselves – is something “jealously guarded by every state.” To ease their concerns, Fahrenkopf sketches a picture of a “uniform system … where the federal government might license and regulate native American tribes — because they’re sovereign nations and would never submit to the jurisdiction of a state government — and delegating to states that have the wherewithal, the experience to regulate. [These states] would be the ones licensing, regulating and taxing online gaming companies.” (Translation: let Nevada handle it.)
SOURCE CALVINAYRE