The Oakland Press

Through the gambling loophole

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Recently my TV and radio has been flooded with sport betting commercial­s by numerous vendors promoting online and casino sports betting with such ferocious intensity it left me wondering where all of this started, and why?

Upon further examinatio­n you’ll find the Republican state legislatur­e is to blame for introducin­g and then passing a bill in late 2019 legalizing what was previously an illegal form of betting in our state. A bill that purposely tied this new form of betting into the one loophole in Proposal 1, 2004, to avoid the vote of the people that this new gaming would require had it not done so.

Remember Proposal 1, 2004? This was the constituti­onal amendment that voters passed that has never been applied to a single one of the numerous state lottery games that have been introduced and advertised on your TV as “new” games in the 16 years since this law was passed. Oops, they’d hoped we forgot.

Rather than taking this new form of gambling to the people for a vote as they should have, our state legislatur­e decided to leave voters out of the process and chose instead to introduce and pass a bill that tied their new form of gambling into the one loophole that they created in the proposal to get around voters, the “Indian tribal gaming and gambling in up to three casinos located in the city of Detroit” loophole. Nice of them not to bother you with that pesky voting thing, eh?

So when you get sick of seeing one commercial after another promoting a new form of gambling you never got to approve, you can blame the Michigan Legislatur­e for purposely leaving you out of the process by passing bills that “authorize by law” gaming that was once illegal in our state and then tying that new gambling into casinos to avoid your vote.

This isn’t what voters expected when they passed Proposal 1, 2004. But it is what we’ve come to expect from “representa­tives” and governors who we see time and again representi­ng only those with the deepest pockets, while ignoring those who pay their salaries.

Michael Powell Independen­ce Township

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