Sen. John Marty and two colleagues introduced legislation Thursday outlining the safeguards he believes are necessary if sports betting is legalized in Minnesota.
Bills to legalize sports betting on mobile devices have advanced in both the House and Senate, but neither has gotten a floor vote and the prospects remain uncertain. Marty is wary of the proposition and said if the state is going to expand gambling access, then it needs to provide protections for problem gamblers.
“I think, five years from now, we’re going to have a lot of second thoughts,” said Marty, DFL-Roseville, about expanding gambling to mobile sports betting.
Signing onto his bill as co-sponsors were DFL Sens. Scott Dibble of Minneapolis and Erin Maye Quade of Apple Valley.
Sen. Matt Klein, DFL-Mendota Heights, is sponsoring the main sports betting bill under consideration. While he didn’t address the specifics of the new bill, he said he was pleased that Marty is looking at options.
“I’m encouraged that he has proactive ideas about how to legalize sports wagering safely in our state and isn’t simply a hard no on the concept,” Klein said.
Marty’s ideas might sound like long shots, but few options can be discounted as a possible bargaining point. Given Democrats’ narrow control of the Senate — with 34 votes, compared to Republicans’ 33 — bipartisan support will likely be needed for something to pass.
Marty said he’s open to discussion. When asked if his bill was an all-or-nothing proposition, Marty said: “Every bill gets negotiated, but I think this spells out the type of safeguards we ought to have.”