FRANK ELECTION CAMPAIGN SUPPORT FROM ONLINE GAMBLERS
18 July 2008
Non-gambling Democrat is the industry's hero
The Boston Globe newspaper reported this week that
Newton, Massachusetts Congressman Barney Frank does not
gamble, but has received support for his reelection
campaign from many gamblers.
The reason will be well known to most online gamblers
and operators, if not the Boston public at large - Frank
has been a determined political campaigner for a
state-controlled, regulated and legalised online
gambling regime in the United States, and strongly
supports the right of citizens to decide how they spend
their disposal income.
He has been instrumental in pointing out the confusion
and inequities in US laws and tried to fix them, in the
process publicising the positive aspects of the industry
and its taxation potential.
To quote the Boston Globe article: "More than any other
lawmaker, Frank is cited by online gamblers as their
standard-bearer. In his powerful position as chairman of
the House Financial Services Committee, he has proposed
legislation that would legalize their industry, which
has a shadowy image and is constantly under fire by the
US Department of Justice."
The newspaper goes on to reveal that over the past year,
Frank has quietly become a cult hero for poker players
and the online gambling industry by championing their
cause on Capitol Hill. The result is contributions from
gamblers to his campaign during a fund-raiser, and since
January 2007, he has received $48 300 from poker
interests, making up about 7 percent of his individual
contributions, according to public records.
The Globe reports that gambling information websites
have started posting videos of Frank from C-SPAN. Recent
donors to his campaign account include a pit boss at the
Bellagio Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, and a world
champion professional poker player who started out on
the Internet called Chris Moneymaker.
In October, 10 of the country's top professional poker
players held a fund-raiser in Washington for Frank. The
player roll call included the likes of Annie Duke,
Howard Lederer and Andy Bloch.
The report goes on to outline the history and current
legislation position of online gambling in the United
States, including the controversial passage into law of
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, which
bans financial transactions with online gambling
companies and resulted in a number of large companies
leaving the US market and incurring heavy losses.
Importantly, the report notes that several businesses
were exempted from the law, including online state
lotteries, fantasy sports, and Internet horse racing.
In an interview with the Boston Globe, Frank said that
his stance on gambling is rooted in his views about the
proper limits on government intervention in people's
personal decisions. "If people want to gamble in the
privacy of their homes," he said, "they should be
allowed."
He said he reread John Stuart Mill's "On Liberty" before
filing legislation that would block the UIGEA.
"If it affects me, mind your own business," he said. "If
affects others, let the government get involved."
The chief of the one million members strong Poker
Players Alliance, former Senator Alphonse D'Amato, is
quoted as describing Frank thus: "He's a powerful,
well-respected member of the Congress. That is
important. He has been able to get members to look at
this issue. No one has been able to do that."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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