The Minnesota House voted Thursday to legalize sports betting, marking the closest the Legislature has come in years to expanding for-profit gambling in the state.
Minnesotans would be able to place bets at brick-and-mortar locations and online under the House measure, which passed on a bipartisan vote of 70-57, and was crafted with crucial input from the state's 11 tribal nations.
"This is an idea whose time has come," said Rep. Zack Stephenson, DFL-Coon Rapids, the bill's chief sponsor.
But what began as an optimistic bipartisan push has lost steam over the legislative session. Key differences remain in proposals from the House and Senate, which has yet to hold a hearing this year on its bill. With less than two weeks before legislators head home for the summer, it's unclear whether the two chambers will come to an agreement and make 2022 the year that Minnesotans get to legally bet on sports.
The House and Senate bills both would legalize in-person sports betting at tribal casinos and online gaming through vendors that the tribes oversee. The Senate proposal also would allow in-person betting at racetracks.
Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller, R-Winona, told reporters at the Capitol Tuesday that sports betting "is still a work in progress." But he said there's not Senate support for the House version of the bill.
"If the stakeholders can come together and try to find some common ground where there are opportunities available at the tribal casinos as well as the tracks, and perhaps if there's something we can do to help benefit our charities, I think agreement could still get done this session," Miller said. "But we're running out of time for that to happen."
Federal law largely prohibited commercial sports betting until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the ban unconstitutional in 2018. Sports betting is legal in more than 30 states — including all of Minnesota's neighbors — and Washington, D.C.