House Subcommittee Meeting on Internet Gaming Regulation Today

justice 3Poker News Daily – The first salvo in the federal online gaming regulation wars will be fired on Tuesday when a House subcommittee meets to discuss the subject in Washington, D. C.

On Tuesday, the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade will hold a hearing at 12:30PM (Eastern Time) at the Rayburn House Office Building in the nation’s capital. As an internal memo circulated to members of the subcommittee states, the purpose of the hearing is to “examine the status of Internet gaming in the United States.” Further discussion of the subject will also look at Texas Representative Joe Barton’s bill that has languished in the House since its introduction, H.R. 2666 or the “Internet Poker Freedom Act of 2013.”

The Barton bill, which was reintroduced this summer in the House, is very similar to the previous online gaming and poker legislations that the Congressman has proposed in that it would look to put significant federal regulation on the industry. The legislation would leave the ability for states and/or Indian tribes to opt out of federal regulation, allow for online poker but no other forms of online casino gaming, set age restrictions and not allow for credit card transactions for gaming purposes. Previously, the attempts by Rep. Barton have been heard in this same subcommittee back in 2011, but the bill died with the close of Congress in 2012.

The stakes are a bit higher this time with the full discussion of online gaming and poker as well as H.R. 2666. Six invited witnesses will be allowed to testify in front of the subcommittee and both sides of the argument will be stepping up. The Poker Players Alliance is sending Executive Director John Pappas, who will no doubt be on the side for the federal regulation of online poker at the minimum and potentially online gaming overall. He will be joined by Geoff Freeman, the President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Gaming Association, which also advocates for a federal resolution to the question of online gaming and poker.

The Sheldon Adelson-led anti-online gaming forces will be led by Andrew Abboud, the Vice President of Government Relations and Community Development with the Las Vegas Sands Corporation. Adelson, the Chief Executive Officer and owner of the LVSC, has been vocal throughout 2013 in his opposition to online gaming, even to the point of using the LVSC to form an anti-online gaming group, the Coalition to Stop Internet Gambling. Not directly linked to Adelson’s forces but probably supportive of his drive will be another witness, Les Bernal, the National Director for the group Stop Predatory Gambling.

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