Texas reps file bill to help Indian tribes get gambling options on their lands

Tribal lands in Texas could find itself on the inside track to legalized gambling if a resolution filed by state representatives, Senfronia Thompson and James White, makes its way to a November ballot proposing a state constitutional amendment that would legalize gambling on these lands.

The two representatives, in collaboration with the Alabama-Coushatta and Ysleta del Sur Pueblo tribes, authored House Joint Resolution 129 specifically to abolish any legal ambiguities that have stood in the state when it comes to tribal gaming.

While casinos are still banned in Texas, there is one functioning casino in the state belonging to the Kickapoo tribe, which, according to University of Texas anthropology professor Shannon Speed, it was able to open after going through the Bureau of Indian Affairs. by contrast, the Alabama-Coushatta tribe also opened a casino on its reservation in 2001 but was forced to shut it down after a federal court ordered its closure because it was engaging in an activity that the state does not allow its citizens to do.

This is where House Joint Resolution 129 comes into the picture. One of its key objectives is to create a level playing field for state tribes that remove any different avenues by which tribes can secure approval to offer gambling in the state. There’s also that issue about perceptions surrounding the state impeding on the constitutional rights of tribes as sovereign nations in the US. “If you are pursuing your civil rights as a minority, you are pursuing your rights as a citizen of a nation, but most native tribes are actually looking for their rights as sovereign nations apart from the U.S.,” Speed told the Daily Texan. “So if tribes are unable to participate in gaming based on an act from a foreign government, it really encroaches on the tribes’ sovereignty.”