Opponents of a referendum [PDF: Proposal 1] to expand non-Indian gaming in New York are being outspent by supporters.
Opponents lack the cash to make a big splash. Meanwhile, pro-referendum groups are airing TV ads and hosting rallies to turn out the vote in November.
“We’d love to have a white knight ride in,” Dave Colavito, the unpaid spokesperson for the Coalition Against Gambling, told The New York Times. “But I don’t think it’s going to happen.”
Tribes are staying out of the fray because they signed agreements with Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) to keep non-Indian casinos out of their territories in exchange for exclusivity. The Oneida Nation, the Seneca
Nation and the St. Regis Mohawk
Tribe agreed to share revenues with the state.
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Critics Wage Quiet Fight Against Ballot Measure on Adding Casinos (The New York Times 10/22)
Upbeat casino ballot language still convincing potential voters, Siena poll finds (The Syracuse Post-Standard 10/21) Related Stories:
Gaming interests spent $59M amid expansion bid in New York (10/15)
Critics Wage Quiet Fight Against Ballot Measure on Adding Casinos (The New York Times 10/22)
Upbeat casino ballot language still convincing potential voters, Siena poll finds (The Syracuse Post-Standard 10/21) Related Stories:
Gaming interests spent $59M amid expansion bid in New York (10/15)
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