Gambling & Casinos
Gambling lobbying increased 13.6% as online betting expands and sports betting matures. The industry's political influence is dominated by the Adelson fortune — without Miriam Adelson's $120M, the industry's spending would be modest. Sports betting's rapid legalization (38 states in 6 years) is the fastest policy change driven by industry lobbying in recent memory. The next frontier is online gambling (iGaming), with industry pushing state-by-state legalization.$25.0M spent lobbying Washington in 2024 (+14% vs 2023)
Lobbying (2024)
$25.0M
Political Spending
$130.0M
Lobbyists
100
Revolving Door
20
personnel
🏭 The Gambling & Casinos Money Machine
Gambling's political spending is wildly disproportionate to its lobbying — $130M in political spending vs. $25M in lobbying. That's because Miriam Adelson alone spent $120M, making the casino industry's spending essentially one person's political agenda. Sports betting legalization has swept the nation (38 states) since the 2018 Supreme Court ruling, with DraftKings and FanDuel leading the lobbying push.
The gambling & casinos industry spent $25.0M lobbying Washington in 2024, up 14% from $22.0M in 2023. With 100 registered lobbyists working the halls of Congress, this is an industry that takes its political influence seriously. Beyond lobbying, the industry poured an additional $130.0M into direct political spending — campaign contributions, PAC donations, and independent expenditures designed to shape who holds power.
The industry's top spenders include Las Vegas Sands (Adelson), DraftKings, FanDuel/Flutter, among 5 major players. These companies and organizations don't spend millions on lobbying out of civic duty — each dollar is a calculated investment in regulatory outcomes, tax treatment, and government contracts that directly affect their bottom lines. The concentration of spending among a handful of top players reveals an industry where political influence is as important as market competition.
The industry's lobbying efforts center on , , . Each of these issues represents a potential shift in the regulatory landscape that could mean billions in gains or losses for the companies involved. When the stakes are this high, political spending isn't an expense — it's an investment with measurable returns.
With 20 former government officials now working for gambling & casinoscompanies or lobbying firms, the revolving door between Washington and industry spins freely. These former regulators, congressional staffers, and agency officials bring with them not just expertise but relationships — the kind of access and insider knowledge that money alone can't buy. It's the most effective form of influence: putting people who wrote the rules on the payroll of companies those rules are meant to govern.
📊 Lobbying Trend
2023
$22.0M
2024
$25.0M
Change
+14%
🏢 Top Spenders
The companies and organizations spending the most to influence policy. These are the players shaping the gambling & casinos regulatory landscape.
📌 Key Issues & Industry Position
What the gambling & casinos industry is fighting for — and against. Each issue represents a policy battle where lobbying dollars are deployed to shape outcomes.
🏛️ Regulatory Bodies
The government agencies tasked with regulating this industry. The revolving door between these bodies and the companies they oversee is a critical part of the influence story.
State gaming commissions
Treasury (FinCEN)
FTC