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A casino bill is a bad bet for Virginia Democrats

January 14, 2026
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A casino bill is a bad bet for Virginia Democrats

David C. Frederick is an appellate attorney and longtime resident of McLean, Virginia.

Virginia Democrats preparing for a pivotal new chapter under Gov.-elect Abigail Spanberger have an opportunity — indeed, an obligation — to govern with clarity, purpose and unity. Voters entrusted Democrats with full leadership to focus on the issues that matter most: strengthening public education, lowering living costs, protecting reproductive freedom, improving transportation and building a more just economy.

The last thing the party needs this year is a bruising internal fight over a Fairfax County casino bill, which could distract from that agenda, divide Democrats across regions and overshadow Spanberger’s first legislative session. Reviving such a bill this year, as some Democrats seem intent on doing, would be a strategic mistake.

Few issues in recent years have fractured Democratic lawmakers in Virginia as sharply as the proposed casino in Tysons. Most Northern Virginia legislators, who represent and understand the voters most affected, have been overwhelmingly opposed to the casino proposal since the bill was first introduced in the Virginia Assembly in 2022. Opponents’ concerns include traffic congestion, economic displacement pressures, quality-of-life effects and the troubling precedent of bypassing local government and residents on such a large-scale development matter.

By contrast, some Democrats outside the Tysons area have advocated for the bill, citing potential but largely unsubstantiated state revenue and job creation. A growing body of research suggests those economic promises rarely materialize — and often come with significant downsides.

A 15-year national study from Boise State University examined casino impacts from 2002 to 2017. It found that casino economies experienced slower average employment growth than comparable areas without casinos. Rather than creating new economic activity, casinos tend to reshuffle or cannibalize existing consumer spending, pulling dollars away from local businesses instead of expanding the overall economic pie.

The Boise State study also found that during the 2007-2012 period that included the Great Recession, areas with casinos experienced two to three times lower retail sales growth than non-casino areas — undermining claims that casinos stabilize local economies during downturns. Amid today’s affordability concerns and economic uncertainty, those findings should serve as a clear warning.

Even the tax revenue promises that drive much of the political push for casinos frequently fall short. A 2022 economic brief from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond found that “despite tax revenues being a major motivator for state legalization of casinos, there is little evidence that they boost state taxes.”

Negative quality-of-life effects on nearby residents also raise legitimate concerns. In his book “Gambling in America,” Baylor University economics professor Earl L. Grinols estimated that “the long-term cost-to-benefit ratio from introducing casinos to a region that did not have them previously is greater than 3:1.” Grinols’s research highlighted the underappreciated social costs of casino gambling, which include crime (and additional law enforcement needs), increased costs for social services, adverse effects on families (such as divorce and child neglect), and diminished economic activity from more bankruptcies and lost worker productivity.

There is no reason to think a casino in Tysons would avoid these costs. The downsides — of the proposed development itself and of the divisive legislative disagreements it would spark — far outweigh the benefits. And submitting the issue for a referendum (which Fairfax County voters did not request) simply prolongs the conflict.

Spanberger is entering office with a mandate to govern pragmatically and deliver meaningful results. Her coalition was built on trust — trust that she would lead with competence, moderation and a focus on the real issues facing Virginians.

A casino proposal is no such issue.

Instead, a Tysons casino bill would dominate headlines, eat up political oxygen and become a flash point for controversy — needlessly distracting from much-needed public priorities.

Democrats should focus on enacting early wins on education, transportation and cost-of-living relief. Virginians should contact state delegates and senators to encourage them to oppose any casino bill. Advancing a controversial casino project, with its flawed economic promises, would squander a critical opportunity to show voters how effective government can work for the people.

The post A casino bill is a bad bet for Virginia Democrats appeared first on Washington Post.

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