Gambling Goes Back to the Ballot

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As California fast becomes the gambling capital of the nation, card clubs and racetracks want in on the action and Indian tribes are battling over how much of the take should go to the state. The San Francisco Chronicle has called it a "war zone." Some $70 million has been collected already for two gambling initiatives on November's ballot, and they're likely to break the $92 million record set the last time gambling was on the ballot. Governor Schwarzenegger has made it clear that he thinks Propositions 68 and 70 would be "a disaster for California." Warren Olney speaks with John Hubbell of the San Francisco Chronicle about Prop 68, which would break the tribal monopoly on casino gambling, and with Marc Cooper of the LA Weekly about Prop 70, which would allow unrestricted expansion of Indian gambling.
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Playa Vista

Prop 68: Non-Tribal Commercial Gambling Expansion

Prop 70: Tribal Gaming Compacts

Governor Schwarzenegger's tribal gaming compacts

Cooper's article on tribal gaming

Hubbell's article on Propositions 68 and 70

Anaheim Angels

LA Dodgers

Credits

Host:

Warren Olney

Producer:

Frances Anderton