By Eli Lehrer on 7.14.08 @ 12:07AM
Odds are the EU isn't bluffing when it voices disapproval of U.S. laws restricting Internet gambling.
When trade emissaries from the European Union arrive in
Washington later this month to talk to officials in Congress, the
Justice Department, and other executive branch agencies, they'll
have some difficult questions to ask. In particular, they'll ask
about some gambling laws that rank among some the worst written
sections of the United States Code. If things go poorly a trade
conflict with vast implications for the United States banking
sector could ensue.
Some background first: three federal laws -- only one of them
particularly clear -- govern Internet gambling in the United
States. One, the 1961 Wire Act, limits nearly all gambling by
telephone and telegraph but, for obvious reasons, says nothing
about the Internet. Another, the 1992 Professional and Amateur
Sports Protection Act (the only clear law), essentially bans all
non-Nevada betting on sports other than animal racing and jai alai.
Finally, the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act (UIGEA)
deputizes banks, credit card companies, and credit unions to
enforce all state laws -- including many that date to the 19th
century -- that might bar transactions relating to Internet
gambling.
The EU is interested in the laws and their application because
some European and Caribbean Internet gaming operators have already
faced Wire Act prosecution for engaging in Internet gambling
transactions before UIGEA went into effect in 2006. On the other
hand, U.S.-based horse betting websites operate freely. In other
words, the Department of Justice appears to have selectively
prosecuted non-U.S. operators in violation of World Trade
Organization rules that bar discriminatory treatment. Even more
interestingly, several of the Internet gaming operators under
investigation -- 888.com and partygaming.com -- actually pulled out
of the U.S. market as soon as UIGEA went into force. Already, the
EU has begun the process of creating a formal Trade Barriers
Regulation complaint against the U.S. government. (U.S. Trade
Representative Susan Schwab has, so far, brushed off the
investigation.)
A series of "interrogatories" -- formal questions directed at
American officials -- appears to show what will come. The questions
cover topics ranging from the way the United States has enforced
laws to the size of the U.S. gambling industry. Running almost
5,000 words, the list of questions reads more like the outline of a
legal brief rather than a simple set of inquiries. It asks for
every detail of the operations of the U.S. gaming industry and asks
U.S. regulators to justify nearly every action they've taken with
regard to Internet gambling.
No certainty exists that the EU will ever decide to turn the
dispute into a formal case before the WTO. That said, even the
possibility has serious consequences: Since enforcement of the
gambling laws falls almost entirely on the banking sector, it
appears likely that the EU could well respond with banking
sanctions directed at getting the U.S. to change its behavior.
(Other than the horseracing sites -- which serve an almost
exclusively American clientele -- there are no American gambling
sites to sanction.) Given the enormous volume of trade between the
U.S. and Europe, almost $700 billion in 2007, even a tiny series of
retaliatory measures would have severe implications for the U.S.
economy.
Even if the EU decides to stay quiet and never complains about
UIGEA, it's pretty obvious that America's effort to regulate
gambling at the federal level needs to end. Thirty years ago, when
casinos existed in only one state, federal laws cracking down on
gambling represented the public will. Today, with gambling legal in
48 states, America's debate over gambling has ended with the side
that favors legalization as the clear winner. The positive and
negative consequences of widespread legal gambling have already
touched every corner of American society. The risk of a serious
trade dispute offers a new reason why the U.S. should do away with
its federal gambling laws and let state legislatures and consumer
preferences decide where -- and if -- Internet gambling needs
government regulation.
topics:
Trade, Sports, Law, European Union, NATO, Unions