Friday, May 15, 2015

JOHN McCAIN Works to Keep Tribe from Opening Casino. Can you say LOBBYING MONEY, a la Abramoff?

 Why is Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) pushing legislation to prevent the Tohono O'odham Nation from using its trust land for a casino?  How can those who seek justice, expect Senator McCain to give a fair hearing?   

Is doing what is right a laughable expectation from our elected officials, or just Senator McCain?


From 2004 to 2006, Washington was transfixed by the revelations that several Indian tribes had paid exorbitant fees to then-uber lobbyist Jack Abramoff to stop other tribes from opening casinos that might siphon gamblers away from their own operations.

Ten years and little has changed. Since 2009, the Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) in Arizona has spent nearly $11 million on lobbying Congress to pass legislation that would prevent the Tohono O’odham Nation from opening a competing casino. A sister tribe, the Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community, also with casinos in the Phoenix area, has dropped a couple million dollars more on the fight.

That’s a lot of money spent in service of an issue that most Americans care nothing about. Two Arizona members of Congress, Rep. Paul Gosar and Sen. John McCain, keep the issue bubbling. The question is why.

McCain’s support of anti-Tohono legislation is more puzzling. According to local officials in Phoenix, he vowed several years ago not to take sides in the squabble.

Sen. McCain has decried the “grinding poverty” that suffuses many reservations and, partnering with his mentor, Rep. Mo Udall, wrote the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 after the Supreme Court held states can’t control gambling on reservations. Although he claimed to have qualms about the development of Indian casinos, he acknowledged that when tribes “are faced with only one option for economic development, and that is to set up gambling on their reservations, then I cannot disapprove.”

Once sympathetic to the Tohono’s plight, McCain’s tune has changed. After long refraining from taking a position on the matter, last August he introduced legislation to kill the Tohono casino. This year, he’s back with another bill.

3 comments:

  1. Everywhere we look our enemies appear. The deals made in Washington by lobbyists are very destructive. All to protect a select few and to undercut those that are struggling. Is this really what being Indian has come to?

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  2. I just read that Jack A. served 43 months before being released on December 3, 2010. The thing about lobbyist is they are ether ideologically invested or in Mr. Abramoff's case it is the money that motivates. I think Grandpa McCain is just doing what self interested politicians do. It is the money that ties these guys together. So much for self-determination. I may not like what the casinos have done to our culture and people, but I like it even less when self serving people use the weakness inherent to all of use. It is hard to admit but most if not all of use have a price be it money, power, or some altruistic belief. Even faith in the spirit is hard to hold onto when dealing with the evils of the world. Where are you within the circle?

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  3. I think john McCain wants to be the tribal chairman.

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