Gaming Tribes Battle Online Corporations for Control of California Sports Betting
Messy, dueling ballot initiatives await voters in November.

More than two dozen states and Washington, D.C., have legalized some form of sports betting since a Supreme Court decision struck down a federal ban in 2018. California still has not, but a pair of dueling initiatives on the November ballot may bring about change.
In the style of California politics, it's all a gigantic, expensive mess of competing interests. Proposition 26 and Proposition 27 will legalize betting on professional, collegiate, and amateur sports. But who is allowed to make money off gambling, where gambling tax revenue goes, and how citizens may gamble varies wildly. Existing tribal-owned casinos are looking to maintain a cartel free from competition from online gambling corporations, who want to move in and serve more gamblers.
Proposition 26 is the baby of those existing gaming tribes, and it shows. It confines sports betting to existing casinos and licensed racetracks, all tribe-owned in California. It would also allow for dice games and roulette at existing tribal casinos should they amend their compacts with the state to offer them. It does not allow for online or mobile sports betting. Prop. 26 will mandate a 10 percent tax on the money from sports betting. Fifteen percent of that 10 percent tax would go to the state for gambling addiction programs. Another 15 percent would go to the state's Bureau of Gambling Control to enforce the rules. The rest would go to the state's General Fund to be spent however lawmakers choose.
Proposition 27 allows for online sports betting companies to partner up with gaming tribes in the state to offer online sports betting for those over the age of 21. It specifically requires that people engaged in sports betting be in the state of California but not on Indian lands. It also imposes a 10 percent tax on sports bets. It would establish a division within California's Department of Justice to regulate online betting and enforce the law. The tax revenue from Prop. 27, after funding the regulatory costs, would go into a trust fund. An account would set aside 85 percent of this money for homeless housing and assistance and mental health treatment. The remaining 15 percent would be sent to "nonparticipating tribes" in California that don't have gambling compacts.
Prop. 27 is supported by Major League Baseball, and donors to the campaign include BetMGM (the online sports betting partner to MGM resorts) and the corporations behind FanDuel Sportsbook and DraftKings, according to Ballotpedia. Prop. 27, for reasons that should be obvious, is opposed by the existing gaming tribes in California (some tribes who stand to benefit from the Prop. 27 fund, however, do support it).
Millions of dollars are being spent to support and oppose the two propositions as tribes and corporate gaming firms go head to head. Ballotpedia calculates about $150 million in donations both for and against Prop. 26 and $200 million both for and against Prop. 27. California residents are being hammered with advertisements.
The Los Angeles Times opposes both bills in unabashedly paternalistic terms, worrying about the negative impacts of the expansion of gambling and caring very little about individual freedom. Whether people want to gamble does not seem to factor in their position, just that "The normalization of sports betting has been egged on by betting platforms, athletic leagues and media companies, which see profit in convincing people to gamble away their dollars."
For those who actually value individual freedom over moral panic, Michelle Minton and Marc Joffe of the Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes Reason) analyzed both Prop. 26 and Prop. 27 for their impacts. When discussing Prop. 27, they note that a panic about problem gambling crops up with every single expansion of access, but that "Despite extraordinary increases in access to gambling, problem gambling continues to be rare, and its prevalence has been remarkably stable in the U.S. since the 1970s. This is not to say that problem gambling should be ignored, only that the risks should not be overblown."
Their analysis finds that Prop. 27 would be the initiative that provides California consumers with a competitive gambling environment and the state with more revenue (because, unlike the tribal casinos, these gaming companies would be paying additional taxes to the state on top of the 10 percent mentioned in the initiative). Here's how they see the two stacking up:
Prop. 27 would create a more robust and competitive sports betting market than Prop. 26 by allowing online and mobile betting, generating billions in revenue for the state, gaming tribes, and operators under agreement with those tribes. Still, it could divert some revenue from in-person betting at tribal casinos. It might also put those tribes who wish to enter the online sports betting market but do not want to partner with national brands at a disadvantage in the market.
Proposition 26 would benefit the state's gaming tribes and block out-of-state gambling companies from California's market. But, the benefits generated by Prop. 26 may come at the cost of Californians having competitive choices of where to gamble and would mean forgoing hundreds of millions in tax revenue Proposition 27 would have generated for other communities, non-gaming tribes, and housing programs.
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there's a Little Big Horn joke in here somewhere.
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I did not know that
I'm surprised the woke crowd hasn't complained about this, although Indians are confusing to them, being both POC and conservative.
I mean .... the common bigoted Indian joke used to be about firewater and pidgin English. Have I missed out on the second generation jokes about gambling casinos?
Native tribes are not conservative. Okay, somewhat socially conservative, but not politically conservative. Because of the welfare. Reservations are a culture of dependency and welfare and government paternalism. One is raised in a system where all good things come from government. Your house, your food, your spending cash. Just not your pot. You have to grow that yourself.
So reservation residents overwhelmingly vote Democrat because Democrats tend to promise handouts more often than Republicans.
Casinos were the best thing to happen to a lot of tribes in a couple of centuries. We just need to give them their reservations and let them run those casinos as they see fit. Abolish the BIA.
I've said this for years. If there's nothing wrong with gambling, and most people have no problem with recreational gambling, anyone should be able to set up a gambling shop with minimal licensing, regulation, and taxes. Why do these states carve up territories and grant regional monopolies to casinos with little competition, along with keeping a monopoly on the state run lottery? The other states should be like Nevada and let anyone, so inclined, gamble in bars, bowling alleys, supermarkets, mini-casinos or any place else that wants to offer it.
Ohio, in January, will allow sports betting kiosks in over 300 places in addition to the legal casinos there. Let the market decide.
BTW, I'd like to start an Indian tribe. How do I go about doing it?
First you identify as a Native American. Preferably a colored non-binary one. Then identify as another one. And so on until you've identified as enough to legally qualify as a tribe.
One has to be Chosen by God just like Southern Redneck Christians are !o!
The campaign has been good comedy this summer when we needed it. Prop 27 "will fix homelessness forever" according to the ads. Tribes with big casinos bash it as a giveaway to out of state gambling corporations. Prop 27 backers (mostly out of state gambling corporations) countered with their own bands of Indians saying how the big casino tribes monopolize all the in-state gambling now, and they want their cut too.
No one can come out and say that online gambling should be a basic economic right, or that other states already have it with minimal downside, or that it's already widespread in California (albeit illegally). They have to appeal to the liberal impulses to help the homeless, or to help or at least not hinder the historically persecuted Indigenous populations.
Honest question:
What is currently keeping Californians from betting online from their own personal devices?
There is probably some state law that prohibits it. There is also, I’m pretty sure, still a federal law against interstate online gambling. Meaning that in each state where it is now legal, people can only bet with casinos or gambling companies that are physically in the same state that they are.
As for these two propositions, does Prop. 27 allow sports betting at physical casinos at all, or does it legalize ONLY the online version? The statement that “It specifically requires that people engaged in sports betting be in the state of California but not on Indian lands” suggests the latter, as all the casinos ARE on Indian lands. And Prop 26 legalizes ONLY betting at physical casinos. But I expect that, if it passes, it could be amended later to allow online gambling, still under the tribes’ actual control. So it might be the better choice. Also, what happens if both pass? Does one get priority over the other?
The law prohibits it. People still do, because the state can't actually stop it. But if you win and don't declare your winnings, it becomes a Federal issue. But it's still going on.
A firm I used to work for did some software development in this area. I wasn't working directly on those projects, but the clients paid damned good money for it. The several states plus the Feds cracked down on it, and the gravy train stopped.
Why do tribes get to write California propositions? These people are "first nations", with their own autonomous lands. They should have no say in the politics or policies of other states.
Because they handed a wad of cash to california legislators to do so. They don't need to vote to participate.
From the ads in my social media feed, it would seem everyone and their grandmother are against these bills. I'll probalby vote no on both because both are a steaming pile of excrement covering the core of what was originally a good idea. But the ads themselves are so weird I just have to comment on them.
One group is of course native tribes worried about losing their culture. Uh sorry, you already lost that a couple centuries ago if not longer. Basically they don't want the competition. Expected. But the other group I just don't understand. And they just started showing up. Vote NOT they say, because these bills do not solve the problem of homelessness. Huh? Why try to link gambling regulations to homelessness? How many idiot voters will buy into that argument? My brain just isn't parsing this argument at all.
If you want a bill to help homelessness, then find or write one and get it on the ballot. I mean, duh.
(Hearsay)
Friends that live there say that Calif is out of money (for new stuff). Anything that is new, needs its own income stream. You want to fix homelessness ? Pony up some cash for it. So attaching this casino scheme to homelessness lets everybody feel good like they actually did something instead of what they are actually doing which is sitting around drinking latte with a pinkie-finger extended.
How many idiot voters will buy into that ? Apparently a lot.
Well, it's not surprising because sports betting is actually highly profitable, and if you manage to learn all the basics and know enough about players and teams, it can be quite money-making for you as well. That's the reason I decided to check out https://parimatch.in/en/page/cricket-super-smash and give sports betting a try, and I wasn't disappointed at all.
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