Problems with WTO Continue
Last week the LA Times gave a scathing commentary on the state of online casino
gambling in the United States. Between the current legislation (the UIGEA) and
the proposed new legislation advocating licensing and regulation of online
casinos in the U.S., the debate is heated. Then add into that equation the World
Trade Organization, and their stance that the U.S.’s latest legislation is
against foreign policy, and you have a debacle worthy of the National Enquirer.
Though Senator Barney Frank’s current proposal does have some strong support in
the legislature, the U.S. has made confirmation this week that the US online
casino gambling laws will not be changing in the near future. But that
announcement doesn’t mean the U.S.’s problems are over yet. The WTO still
maintains that the UIGEA violates internationally agreed upon policy, and that
the U.S. needs to address these issues immediately.
Part of the issue with the WTO organization stems from the fact that in 1993 the
U.S. agreed to an open U.S. market. Now though, the U.S. is countering that the
U.S. has placed restrictions on activities since 1961 if they threaten the
public moral. For that reason, the U.S. is arguing that online casino gambling
falls under that purview. But even to that argument the WTO is contending that
online horserace betting is still legal in the United States, so foreign based
online casinos should be allowed to accept horserace betting if nothing else.
As a way to eliminate the problem with the WTO, the US has plans to “clarify”
the 1993 open market commitment adding that “recreational services” do not
include any form of online casino gambling. Once those modifications are made,
the WTO will have no further jurisdiction over the issue. This little fix seems
to merely act as a band-aid to the real issue—the U.S. needs to restructure and
clarify the country’s online casino gambling laws.
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