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The National Assembly of France is examining a bill which could lead to legalising online casinos in France. The initiative’s core proposal is a “five year moratorium” where online casino gambling will be legal only for “national players” for five years.
Bill 1248, introduced last week by Philippe Latombe from the Democratic Movement Party, outlines proposals for opening a regulated market of online casinos in France.
In article 2 of the bill, it was stated that this measure would last until January 1, 2030. The market will be opened up to all operators who are interested in providing online casino after this.
The bill stated that this would allow licensees in the “serene economic conditions” to develop before the market is fully opened.
If the casino were to open immediately and in full, this would disrupt our regulatory frameworks and weaken both the national industry of casinos and the local economies where they are located. The bill stated that this could have devastating effects on employment in the sector.
In Article 1, operators are authorized to offer similar online casino games to those available at land-based casinos.
Article 3 states that the online casino games will be subject to the same taxes as other gambling forms.
Online casinos are not currently legal in France. Internet betting on horse races and sports is allowed through licensed operators.
Bill 1248 states that the new habits of players have led them to prefer gambling online. Internet casino is currently illegal in the United States, forcing consumers to gamble on offshore sites without protection.
The bill stated that legalising online casinos, and issuing licenses to approved operators would create a safer atmosphere for players. The bill also added that this market would help the country generate more tax revenue.
The bill stated that “the ban against online casinos has reached its limit, even if authorities tried to identify and block sites illegally using court orders.”
In light of these changes, it seems that the absolute prohibition regime does not protect consumers very well. It is therefore necessary to ask about the evolution of French law to accommodate new practices.