CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2022 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SPORTS GAMBLING WILL BE BACK ON THE
BALLOT, AND SOON”
Sports
gambling lost, and badly. But not to worry, would-be online gamblers and folks
who want to lay wagers in Indian casinos or racetracks: Sports gambling will be
back on the ballot soon.
The
untold billions of dollars that promised to flow from either this fall’s
Proposition 26 or 27 – or both – were the reason Native American gaming tribes
and the big national online sports bookmakers put up a record war chest of more
than $440 million to pass these propositions. The same billions assure the idea
will be back as often as it takes for something akin to 26 or 27 to pass.
Maybe
next time, the campaigns will be more honest. For while lies are common in this
state’s initiative politics, rarely if ever have they been as obvious and
obnoxious as those propounded by gaming interests this fall.
One
remarkable pre-election poll showed voters didn’t take long to recognize this:
While both propositions ran about even among voters who saw no more than one or
two of the ads backing 26 and 27, those who saw a lot of ads were against the
propositions by margins of almost 2-1. The ads were not merely ineffective;
they were self-defeating.
Dishonesty
began with the formal title of Prop. 27: the “California Solutions to
Homelessness and Mental Health Support Act.” That didn’t even mention gambling.
In fact,
had 27 won, gambling revenues would have been taxed at slightly more than 10
percent. Of that money, 85 percent would have gone to homeless support agencies
that already get billions in state tax money. So it would have made little
difference in a field where big money has proved ineffective.
Meanwhile,
commercials for Prop. 26 were also dishonest, implying that much of its take
would go to mental health treatment of pretty much the same unhoused populace
that 27 claimed to help.
In
reality, neither measure was giving away much of the proceeds.
That may
have been one reason the falsely promoted Propositions 26 and 27 lost among
both Republicans and Democrats, Donald Trump supporters and Trump haters.
This
entire outcome was as counterintuitive as it gets. Early on, if you were a
gambling man or woman, you would have felt foolish betting against either
initiative.
For the
recent history of propositions aiming to legalize things that long were
considered illegal vices suggested one or both would pass easily. That’s what
happened first with medical marijuana and then with recreational pot. Now,
because of initiative outcomes, it’s hard to find a city or county without at
least one cannabis dispensary.
The same
with gambling, where voters in 2000 approved Indian gambling on
once-impoverished and desolate Native American reservations. Eight years later,
voters eagerly expanded the number of slot machines in Native American casinos,
many of which now double as luxury resorts, complete with spas, tennis courts
and sometimes golf courses.
But as
the tide turned against online sports gaming, backers vowed they are not
finished, that they will bring legalized online sports betting to the ballot
again. This would not be unusual. Proposition 29, the third attempt in the last
four years by the Service Employees International Union to unionize at least
some of the labor force at dialysis clinics, failed badly again this month, but
who’s to say the union won’t try again?
It was no
surprise, then, when the CEOs of the FanDuel and DraftKings online sports
bookies, announced at an October gambling convention in Las Vegas that they
would “live to fight another day.”
First,
though, they will have to work with Indian casinos to share the wealth so they
don’t end up with another set of competing propositions, something that
pollsters said hurt their chances this year.
They will
also need to sweeten the pot when it comes to sharing the new wealth they could
get from California with positive civic causes and with impoverished Native
American tribes. Giving these interests a minuscule share of the proceeds may
have been another factor in the defeat of both 26 and 27.
So the
gaming folks have work to do if they want to milk the billions they seek to
take from Californians.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available
in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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