A Conservative Argument For Legalizing Online Gambling

A Conservative Argument For Legalizing Online Gambling

August 16, 2010

A Conservative Argument For Legalizing Online Gambling

By: Ifrah Law

Conservative columnist Michelle Minton just wrote an interesting op-ed piece for Forbes.com on why Republicans, and by extension, conservatives in general, should favor legalized Internet gambling.

Minton’s arguments come in the wake of the recent passage by the House Financial Services Committee of a bill that would legalize Internet gambling, including online poker, in the United States and set up a federal regulatory framework for it.

Her case in favor of the bill is a libertarian one: a classic conservative argument, she says, is “that the government should not have the right to tell private individuals what behavior they may or may not engage in the privacy of their own home, so long as that activity doesn’t infringe on the rights of others.” This applies very well to gaming in one’s own living room, using one’s own computer and mouse.

A legislator’s private belief that people shouldn’t gamble, she says, is “no reason to abandon the conservative ideals of limited government, individual rights and personal responsibility in the public sphere.”

Minton’s op-ed is a refreshing addition to the sometimes stale debate about Internet gaming. It’s noteworthy that nearly all states already countenance some form of gambling in public places, whether it be riverboat casinos, horse racing, or lotteries. It is indeed intrusive for the government to ban essentially the same activity when it is engaged in privately. And we also take the view that some forms of Internet “gaming,” such as poker, are not gambling but games of skill that are not even properly viewed as illegal under existing law.

In addition, the enforcement resources that some states spend on prosecuting Internet gaming could better be used against real white-collar crimes, not victimless ones.

Ifrah Law

Ifrah Law

Ifrah Law operates at the cutting edge of technology, innovation, and regulation. Our lawyers represent iGaming industry clients throughout the entire business cycle, from the formation of a corporation or licensing relationship, through marketing, partnerships, growth, and disputes, to profitable exits.

New House Bill May Open Door to Legal Online Poker
White-Collar Crimes |
Jun 26, 2011

New House Bill May Open Door to Legal Online Poker

By: Ifrah Law
New House Bill May Open Door to Legal Online Poker
Ifrah on iGaming |
Jun 26, 2011

New House Bill May Open Door to Legal Online Poker

By: Ifrah Law
Court of Appeals 9th Circuit to D.C. Circuit: We’ll See You in [The Supreme] Court
White-Collar Crimes |
Jun 24, 2011

Court of Appeals 9th Circuit to D.C. Circuit: We’ll See You in [The Supreme] Court

By: Ifrah Law
Good-Faith Rule Applies to Document Destruction
White-Collar Crimes |
Jun 20, 2011

Good-Faith Rule Applies to Document Destruction

By: Ifrah Law

Subscribe to Ifrah Law’s Insights