Feds Would Have To Approve State Sports Betting Laws Under New Draft Bill In Congress

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hacheman@therx.com
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.Feds Would Have To Approve State Sports Betting Laws Under New Draft Bill In Congress

Dustin Gouker on Dec 4, 2018


This is a developing story and will be updated.


A draft of a federal sports betting bill has appeared in Congress in which the federal government would have to approve state laws legalizing sports gambling



A quick look at the bill


Here’s what the bill would do from a bird’s eye view:



  • Appears to give veto power to federal government on state sports betting law, if they don’t meet minimum standards
  • Bans states from authorizing betting on amateur events, but allows for college sports betting.
  • Amends and clarifies the federal Wire Act to allow for some amount of sports betting information to flow across state lines.
  • Mandates use of official league data by sports betting operators from sports leagues through 2022.
  • Creates a “national sports wagering clearinghouse” that operators provide wagering data “in real time” or close to it.
  • Allows for interstate sports wagering compacts to be entered into between different states and tribes (also subject to AG approval).
  • Says that the federal excise tax of .25 percent of handle will now be placed in a “wagering trust fund” for deployment on sports betting matters.
  • Sets up minimum standards for dealing with problem gambling for operators and related to advertising.

Legal Sports Report
is not aware of who authored the draft, or who had a hand in its creation.


States need fed approval


The bill creates a mechanism in which states cannot unilaterally pass laws. Instead, they need to take the law to the Department of Justice for approval. From the bill:

To request approval to administer a State sports wagering program, a State shall submit an application to the Attorney General at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such information as the Attorney General may require.


The bill then goes into certain minimum standards that any state sports betting law must have to receive federal approval. The AG would then have 180 days to approve the law. If it finds any problems with the law under the federal guidelines set forth in this bill, then there are steps that can be taken to get into conformity with those guidelines.


It’s not entirely clear, on an initial reading of the bill, how it interacts with legal sports betting that already goes on in eight states in the US. Of course, even more states will likely pass sports betting laws before Congress might take action on this bill, which is not officially introduced yet.


Official data for sports betting


The bill gets into the issue of “official data” provided by leagues, a hot topic in state legislatures across the country this year:

With respect to any sports wager accepted on or before December 31, 2022, provide that a sports wagering operator shall determine the result of a sports wager only with data that is licensed and provided by
(I) the applicable sports organization; or
(II) an entity expressly authorized by the applicable sports organization to provide such information.

The second entity would appear to be companies like Sportradar and Genius Sports, which act as middlemen for data between sports leagues and sportsbooks.


Money from the sports betting excise tax


The bill also addresses the existing federal excise tax on sports wagering, which taxes handle — not revenue — at a rate of .25 percent.


That tax has created a fairly minimal amount of money from Nevada sports betting. But that amount is about to skyrocket as more and more states legalizing. That money, which is not earmarked for anything currently, is deployed for sports betting matters under the draft bill.


The bill creates and funds both a National Sports Wagering Commission and a “national sports wagering clearinghouse” with this money that work to help coordinate efforts at the national level and between states on sports betting.
 

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This is bullshit. The Supreme Court ruled the states have jurisdiction in these matters. Cannot see the Supreme Court giving their approval to this attempted end run by congress.
 
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This is bullshit. The Supreme Court ruled the states have jurisdiction in these matters. Cannot see the Supreme Court giving their approval to this attempted end run by congress.

Separation of powers, but I'm not surprised by this..Around a year to 16 months ago, Lindsay Graham (SC) wanted to introduce a bill that would outlaw ALL FORMS including horse racing of ONLINE gambling... His bill never got out of whatever committee it was in. Thank God for that!
 

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This is bullshit. The Supreme Court ruled the states have jurisdiction in these matters. Cannot see the Supreme Court giving their approval to this attempted end run by congress.

This won't pass any time soon, if at all......they need to pass a law legalizing weed federally nation wide before even thinking of sports betting.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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I've read more on this and it doesn't sound good.

One thing I'm curious to and may have missed is, will states who have already passed legalization, be grandfathered in & exempt from having to get Congress' approval....?
 
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I've read more on this and it doesn't sound good.

One thing I'm curious to and may have missed is, will states who have already passed legalization, be grandfathered in & exempt from having to get Congress' approval....?

Hache, I haven't read any of the proposed law. But Congress can write it anyway they choose. Now getting it passed is another matter. My strong guess is they will do something, but I doubt the only thing that amounts to much is that small fee which won't make anybody happy. The genie is out of the bottle now so to speak. I don't see them stopping any state that passes legislation for sports gambling, but anything is possible. Just my 2 cents worth.
 

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Hache, I haven't read any of the proposed law. But Congress can write it anyway they choose. Now getting it passed is another matter. My strong guess is they will do something, but I doubt the only thing that amounts to much is that small fee which won't make anybody happy. The genie is out of the bottle now so to speak. I don't see them stopping any state that passes legislation for sports gambling, but anything is possible. Just my 2 cents worth.

Trying to stop states from providing sports betting is like trying to stop states from selling legal weed, once each state passes their own laws allowing it, doesn't matter what the federal law is with weed, states continue with their business.

Thing is with sports betting, the SCOTUS legally passed the law allowing each state to provide sports betting......so senator Hatch can try all he wants to stop it, will never happen.
 
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There are federal laws, that are rarely, if ever enforced. I heard about one the other day and it was over my head to explain it...But that's why big time lawyers make big time money.
 

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