Headlines

What Can I Do?: Discussion

By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

discussion.jpg

In an effort to allow PPA members and supporters to discuss poker
legislation and organize at the state and local levels for Poker
Freedom Vote 2006, we have created a forum space for members to
interact:

The Poker Players Alliance Member Action Network Forums

or go to: http://webringamerica.com/4/pokerplayersalliance

You will have to create a username and password to post in the forums.

Please register and post to start sharing thoughts and ideas with
other PPA Members and supporters. Because these forums are just
starting up, please help out by posting when you can.

These State and Local Chapter Forums are meant for PPA Members from
the same areas to interact, discuss, and organize statewide and local
initiatives to help raise awareness of the PPA and its mission. So if
you want to start something or offer your local support, please
register and post in the appropriate state forum.

What Can I Do?: Donate

By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

ppa_donations.jpg

The Poker Players Alliance Member Action Network is seeking donation
of goods and services from those members interested in contributing
more to the PPA’s mission of defending poker player rights.

Possible donations include services and goods such as:

  • copy/printing services
  • graphic design
  • video production
  • writing

We are also interested in donations from companies to be used for membership drives, contests and freerolls.

Possible poker-related donations include:

  • supplies, tables, clothing
  • books, dvds, subscriptions
  • poker school scholarships
  • league memberships

Contact us at membership@theppa.org

The Pokers Players Alliance also accepts monetary donations. This is
an option for supporters who wish to anonymously contribute to the PPA.
It is also for members who have already joined and want to contribute
more.

You can find the donate option on the Join page at theppa.org

donate_ppa.jpg

The Poker Players Alliance is a not-for-profit organization. Your
membership and donations go directly to the PPA’s lobbying efforts in
Washington.

Louisiana Bill allowing poker in bars, restaurants heads to Senate

By Associated Press
Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

BATON ROUGE (AP) — A bill that would let bars and restaurants in Louisiana hold the popular Texas Hold ‘Em poker tournaments is headed to the full Senate for debate after winning approval from a Senate committee.

The tournaments have been the subject of dispute because the state’s top liquor regulator believes they violate Louisiana’s gambling laws. Supporters of the bill say they don’t view the poker games as gambling as long as the bars and restaurants don’t get a cut of the wagering.

The bill by Rep. Warren Triche of Thibodaux would allow the businesses to hold poker tournaments once a week for people at least 21 years old as long as the owner

doesn’t get part of the proceeds and doesn’t charge an entrance fee.

The bars and restaurants wouldn’t be able to operate the tournament, furnish supplies like cards and poker chips, or advertise beyond their regular business signs.

Opponents say the tournaments would hurt charitable gaming operations and the bill would expand gambling in Louisiana to more than 20,000 bars.

Triche sponsored a similar bill last year, but it couldn’t win passage in the House. This year, the House narrowly approved the measure. A Senate judiciary committee agreed to it in a 3-1 vote today, sending it to the Senate floor.

If it receives Senate approval, it faces an uncertain future because Gov. Kathleen Blanco has opposed it as an expansion of gambling.

 
Orleans Parish is excluded from the bill.

What Can I Do?: Act

By Poker Players Alliance
Monday, June 18th, 2007

ppa_act.jpg

What Else Can I Do?
Suggested Ideas

PPA Members and Concerned Citizens

  1. Write a letter, call, or visit your Members of Congress (talking points and congress meeting guide)
  2. Vote! Find out where your state representatives stand on legalizing online poker and vote accordingly. Tell others about how you’re voting and why.
  3. Voice your opinion with phone calls or letters to your local media (newspapers, radio shows, local tv station).
  4. Become a free PPA member and get important notifications.
  5. Become a paid PPA Member or donate more.
  6. Tell a friend about joining the PPA [mail link]
  7. Volunteer at the local level, as well as in providing local information and support in the PPA Member Action Network forums.
  8. Have creative ideas? Make it happen!
  9. Have a website? Add a banner.

Poker Players

  1. Wear your PPA shirt when you go play at your local cardroom.
  2. Have “tableside chats” and talk about the PPA and the online poker ban with your fellow cardplayers at the table.
  3. Talk to your local cardroom manager about posting the latest newsletter, hanging a PPA poster.
  4. Take a picture of yourself in your PPA shirt at your favorite cardroom and send it to us or add it to our Flickr group page

Online Poker Players

  1. Change your poker player image or avatar to show the PPA logo.
  2. Have “tableside chats” and talk about the PPA and the online poker ban with other online players at the table.
  3. Get some fellow PPA supporters and ask your online poker site to offer a PPA membership drive tournament.
  4. Ask them to include information about the PPA in their next member newsletter.

Professional Poker Players

  1. Call us and leave a recorded message voicing your support for the PPA (example), email us for instructions.
  2. Send us an email with permission to use your quotes for membership materials.
  3. Mention the PPA (or wear your PPA shirt) in your media appearances for web, radio, print, or tv. (and let us know!)
  4. Ask poker players if they are familiar with the PPA, and urge others to get involved.

Poker Organizations, Industry Professionals, and Businesses:

  1. Offer special discounts or promotions to PPA members
  2. Link on your site to the PPA
  3. Add information about the PPA to your newsletters
  4. Sponsor events supporting the PPA
  5. Issue a press release or talk to local media about supporting the PPA
  6. Donate

Bloggers, Podcasters, and other Online Media Publishers

  1. Add a PPA banner or logo to your website. If there is not one you like, then feel free to create your own (and send us a copy too!)
  2. Post a blog, Record a podcast, or Edit/Upload a video about the PPA or H.R.4411. Notify us so we can tell other members about your work.
  3. Get on the PPA Action Alert Media List to help the PPA quickly publicize an Action Alert.
  4. Mention the PPA in your online poker communities, forums, and discussions.
  5. Join the PPA Myspace page.
  6. Join the discussion at the PPA Member Action Network Forum
  7. Add photos to the PPA Flickr group page
  8. Link to any of our websites.

You have other ideas? Send us an email and let us know

Florida Cardroom Bill (SB752) Becomes Law without Governor’s Signature

By Poker Players Alliance
Thursday, June 14th, 2007

GENERAL BILL   by General Government Appropriations and Finance and Tax and Regulated Industries and Geller and Fasano

Cardrooms [EPCC]: (THIS BILL COMBINES CS/CS/S752 & CS/S1192) defines term “tournament”; revises license fees; revises hours of operation; authorizes award of certain prizes; revises betting limits; authorizes tournaments; provides tournament requirements; authorizes additional positions. Amends 849.086.

Effective Date: 07/01/2007

Last Event: 06/13/07 Became Law without Governor’s Signature; Chapter No. 2007-130 on Wednesday, June 13, 2007 6:28 PM

Bill Links:
Text | Track | News

Sweet Home OKs gaming ordinance

By Ellen Ast, Albany Democrat-Herald
Thursday, June 14th, 2007

Sweet Home – James Ashcraft says he plans to hold his first Texas Hold ‘Em tournament at his bar, Chewy’s Sports Pub and Grub, sometime at the end of the summer.

First he has to get a license, but that’s no problem after the City Council Tuesday approved a social gaming ordinance that allows Texas Hold ‘Em poker tournaments inside city limits.

Five council members and Mayor Craig Fentiman voted in favor of the ordinance. Councilor Rich Rowley voted voted no.

Rowley said in a city that already struggles with a history of economic depression, Rowley said the city should err on the side of family values and quality of living.

“Gambling is an addictive behavior,” Rowley said after the meeting. “We’re providing a venue for someone to be able to do that.”

The decision whether to legalize tournaments stirred debate since Ashcraft asked the city for permission to host them in February.

Under the ordinance, hosts, venue owners and their families may not benefit from the games.

City Attorney Robert Snyder said the city will strictly enforce the new five-page ordinance.

“There are real consequences,” he said. “There is no guarantee we won’t come down like bricks.”

Ashcraft said he holds private tournaments in town, which was already allowed by city code.

That also goes for charity events, like school fundraisers.

He already bought equipment to play Texas Hold ‘Em tournaments before earlier this year before someone told him it wasn’t allowed.

“I’m gonna go by the book,” he said.

Jeff Haney on a presidential hopeful from the Las Vegas Valley who hopes to parlay a 2008 Libertarian campaign into a serious run some time down the road

By Jeff Haney, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Wayne Root doesn’t drink, smoke, take drugs or play poker on the Internet.

(I know, I know. Sounds like a typical Saturday night for some Las Vegans.)

Root will, he says, “defend to the death” your right to engage in any of those activities.

After making his name – and fortune – as a TV sports prognosticator,
selling advice to football gamblers on which way to bet against the
point spread, Root is mounting a run for president in 2008 on the
Libertarian ticket with individual freedom at the heart of his campaign
message.

Already Root is a betting favorite to not only win the Libertarian
presidential nomination but also attract the most votes of any
Libertarian candidate ever, according to – who else? – offshore
oddsmakers. (Betting on politics is not permitted in Nevada.)

“I want Wayne Root to become the new face of the Libertarian Party,”
Root said at his home in the Anthem section of Henderson. “The
Libertarian Party has always had good ideas, but it needs someone who’s
a great communicator, someone who can raise money, someone who is a
salesman. That’s where I come in.”

Until last year Root was a stalwart Republican. He even wrote a book
called “Millionaire Republican” and named his youngest child in honor
of Ronald Reagan.

Root became disenchanted with the GOP in recent years, however, and
gravitated toward the Libertarian Party, with its fiscally
conservative, socially liberal message that suited him as a gambler and
as a businessman.

“If there’s a gun to my head and I have to make a choice between the
Republican and Democratic parties, I’d choose the Republican Party,”
Root said. “But the sad truth is that the main thing both parties are
interested in is gaining power for themselves and staying in power. The
only way that both parties know how to do that is to continually
increase the size of government.”

The turning point for Root came last year, he said, when Republican
leaders in Congress successfully pushed for the passage of the Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, which aims to crack down on online
gambling by Americans by restricting financial transactions linked to
Internet gaming sites.

“The gambling bill was the last straw,” Root said. “I’ve been a
Republican my whole life, but I thought that bill was the antithesis of
what the Republican Party should stand for – keeping the government out
of the private lives of American citizens.”

The new law drew the ire of Americans who bet sports and play poker or casino-type gambling games online.

Root figures at least 10 million people in the United States play Internet poker, and he hopes to tap them as his base.

Although Root has had some discussions with 2004 World Series of
Poker champion Greg Raymer about Raymer possibly serving as a running
mate, he doesn’t want to foster the impression that he’s pushing for an
all-gambling, all-the-time ticket.

“People might think it’s funny if two gamblers are running,” Root
said. “But online gambling is not the big issue. What it represents is
the big issue: freedom.”

In courting online poker players, Root says he wants to align his
campaign with the Poker Players Alliance, a nonprofit political
organization that has signed former Sen. Al D’Amato as its chairman.

“My No. 1 wish would be for all forms of online gambling to be
legal, the way it is in England,” Root said. “But if we can’t get that
right away, I’d be willing to settle for a ‘carve-out’ for poker as a
game of skill.”

Because he’s best-known to sports bettors as a meticulously coiffed
talking head with an expensive suit hyping the latest “game of the
week” on cable TV, and outside the gambling world mostly as a “Las
Vegas oddsmaker,” with all the baggage that phrase carries, Root knows
his presidential candidacy will raise some questions.

Starting with, is Wayne Root serious?

“I’m very serious, although I realize the odds of any third-party
candidate winning the presidential election in 2008 are very slim,”
Root said. “But if I can make some noise as a third-party candidate,
maybe those odds can get a lot better in 2012, 2016 or even 2020.”

Root, influenced by Barry Goldwater and his book, “The Conscience of
a Conservative,” hopes to revive Goldwater’s conservative ideas.

“I believe Goldwater had the single greatest message in politics,
but unfortunately it got lost,” Root said. “Part of that was because
the TV age didn’t suit Goldwater well. He looked like everyone’s stern
grandfather.

“Without a great messenger, the message gets lost.”

PPA – Thank You

By Poker Players Alliance
Saturday, June 9th, 2007


Dear Supporter,

Thank you for helping keep the Poker Players Alliance going strong.

If you have any questions or concerns about your contribution or order, please contact us at ppastore@theppa.org

PPA also offers free member tools for to help raise awareness and stay updated on the latest news and events, click here.

Please note: The PPA Customer Service Center
will be closed Dec.24th, 25th, 31st, and Jan.1st for the holidays.

All
PPA Store orders made between Dec.21st and Jan. 6th will be shipped on Jan. 7th. We
appreciate your patience. Happy Holidays.

Thanks again,
Poker Players Alliance

US lawmaker to seek online gambling ban exemptions

By Peter Kaplan, Reuters
Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

WASHINGTON, June 6 (Reuters) – A Florida congressman is expected to introduce legislation on Thursday exempting poker and some other games from the Internet gambling ban passed by Congress last year, the lawmaker’s aide said on Wednesday.

The bill planned by Democratic Rep. Robert Wexler would carve out “skill games” such as online poker, bridge, chess and mahjong from the online gambling prohibition that President George W. Bush signed into law in October.

“It allows Americans to play poker online as they should have every right to do,” a Wexler spokesman, Josh Rogin said on Wednesday.

The online gambling ban passed last year made it illegal for banks and credit card companies to make payments to online gambling sites.

Wexler’s bill will be unveiled the day before the House Financial Services Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the subject at the behest of Rep. Barney Frank, the committee chairman and an outspoken critic of the online gambling ban.

The subject of Friday’s hearing will be legislation Frank introduced that would more broadly roll back the online gambling ban. Rogin said Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, is also supportive of Wexler’s bill.

Scheduled to tesify at Friday’s hearing are the heads of several online payment processors.

Wexler is a member of the financial services panel, as well as the House Judiciary Committee.

Rogin said skill games should be treated differently from games of pure chance. “You win and lose based on your ability,” he said. “It’s a deserving distinction.”

Frank has conceded he does not yet have enough support in Congress to rescind the online gambling ban. The ban won majorities among both Republicans and Democrats and opponents of online gambling have vowed to fight efforts to rescind it.

The ban also irked some in the European Union, which is home to some online gambling companies that were forced to withdraw from the United States. It has been closely monitored by investors in some British-based gaming companies, such as Partygaming Plc and 888 Holdings Plc.

In a crackdown on Internet gambling, U.S. prosecutors arrested BETonSPORTS’ then- chief executive in July and its founder last month. Two founders of payments processor NETeller Plc were arrested in January.

Financial Services Committee to Hold Hearing on Internet Gambling Regulation

By House Financial Services Committee
Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

Can Internet Gambling Be Effectively Regulated to Protect Consumers and the Payments System?

Friday, June 8, 2007, 10:00 a.m., 2128 Rayburn House Office Building    

 

Financial Services Committee to Hold Hearing on Internet Gambling Regulation

Washington,
DC – House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA),
today announced that the committee will hold a hearing entitled “Can
Internet Gambling Be Effectively Regulated to Protect Consumers and the
Payments System?”  The hearing will address issues related to ensuring
the safety and security of online gambling.

In
April, Chairman Frank introduced H.R. 2046, the Internet Gambling
Regulation and Enforcement Act of 2007, that would create an exemption
to the ban on online gambling for properly licensed operators, allowing
Americans to lawfully bet online.

 

Witness List & Prepared Testimony:

  • Howard Lederer, Professional Poker Player and Poker Industry Software Consultant
  • Radley Balko, Senior Editor, Reason Magazine
  • Jon Prideaux, Chief Executive, Asterion Payments
  • Gerald Kitchen, Chief Executive Officer, SecureTrading Ltd
  • Pastor Greg Hogan