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Texans stopped casino gambling, but the battle continues.

Texans Successfully Killed Casino Gambling, But the Fight Isn’t Over Yet

For the past six months, the Texas Capitol has been flooded with lobbyists pushing to bring casino gambling to Texas. They spent millions of dollars trying to convince lawmakers to support a constitutional amendment removing the state’s prohibition on casino gambling and welcoming Las Vegas-style casinos to the Lone Star State. Despite their efforts, pro-casino forces failed to convince lawmakers to support the proposal.

While bringing casinos to Texas might be a jackpot for casino operators, it would deal a bad hand to Texas communities by increasing crime and addiction and damaging Texas families. Legalizing casino gambling in the Lone Star State would lead to increased addiction, divorce, and even homelessness.

“Casinos do incredible damage to every community they touch. At Texas Family Project, we want what happens in Vegas to stay in Vegas, not come to Houston, San Antonio, or Fort Worth,” said Texas Family Project policy director Austin Griesinger.

Multiple studies have backed up Griesinger’s claims about the increase in crime, and research shows gambling can be just as addictive as drugs and alcohol. As the Mayo Clinic notes, “Compulsive gambling is a serious condition that can destroy lives.”

The Fight Against Casino Gambling

The specific legislation Texas Family Project opposed, and ultimately helped to kill, was House Joint Resolution 155, a constitutional amendment that (if passed) would legalize casino gambling in Texas, allow up to eight casinos in the state, and create the “Texas Gaming Commission” to oversee the industry.

The main advocate for this legislation was the Texas Destination Resort Alliance, a group set up by the Nevada-based Las Vegas Sands Corporation. Worth more than $20 billion, Sands was owned by casino magnate and political donor Sheldon Adelson. However, control of the company shifted to his wife, medical doctor and drug abuse treatment clinic operator Miriam Adelson, following his death in 2021.

In her former profession, Miriam Adelson was actually helping families heal from the destructive addictions that harm so many in society. Now, she is spending millions on lobbyists in an attempt to increase her company’s profits.

Efforts to bring casinos to Texas have long been opposed by the grassroots of the Texas GOP, which prevented Adelson’s lobbyists from altering the party’s platform to be more casino-friendly at the state convention and then engaged actively in the legislature to oppose gambling legislation.

In March, the Texas GOP unanimously passed a resolution exposing efforts to bring casino gambling to Texas, stating, “The Republican Party of Texas calls on all Republican Texas Legislators to cease and desist with any efforts to open the State of Texas to casino gambling.”

Thanks to grassroots opposition, HJR 155 ultimately fell eight votes short of the two-thirds vote it needed to pass the Texas House. A bill to legalize online sports betting (HB 1942) did pass the House but was killed by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who said there was not sufficient support for the measure in the state Senate.

The Dangers of Casino Gambling

“What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas” is the slogan everyone is familiar with hearing on TV commercials. They feature bright lights, fancy hotels and restaurants, and impressive shows. They paint the image that Las Vegas is a wonderful place to go on vacation. What they don’t paint is the image that Las Vegas is a great place to raise a family. Indeed, Sin City doesn’t rank very highly in that regard.

Based on FBI data, Las Vegas has a crime rate higher than 90 percent of cities in the state of Nevada. The chance that a person will become a victim of a violent crime in Las Vegas — such as armed robbery, aggravated assault, rape or murder — is 1 in 205. It’s for this reason and others that Nevada was recently ranked one of the worst states in America to raise a family by WalletHub.

Over the next two years, grassroots Texans will need to work even harder to convince lawmakers that Texas families are more important than the profits of casino operators. The fight against casino gambling in Texas may have been won this time, but the battle is far from over.

The post Op-Ed: Texans Successfully Killed Casino Gambling, But the Fight Isn’t Over Yet appeared first on The Western Journal.



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