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Question of the Day - 26 May 2024

Q:

Has a sitting president of the United States ever sat down at a slot machine or card table in a Las Vegas casino to play? For how long? Did they win? Which casino(s) and when?

A:

[Editor's Note: This answer is penned by LVA business and political blogger David McKee.]

No. Never. Not a snowball’s chance in hell. 

It might not be political suicide for a sitting president of the United States to gamble at a casino, in Las Vegas or elsewhere, but the upside is virtually nil. It would offend many voters and be a very poor (or at least undignified) optic to see the leader of the free world behaving like a fanny-packing gambler. The security nightmares should be obvious.

Besides, if POTUS won any money, it would look like taking a bribe from Big Gaming.

That's not to say all politicians avoid casinos, but very very few darken their doors, even to glad-hand potential voters — although many solicit and accept donations from the gaming industry. 

A few have even dared to alienate it. Before she was vice president, then-Senator Kamala Harris appeared at a Culinary Union rally. Joe Biden went even further, helping picket Palms Casino Resort when it was still owned by rabidly anti-labor Station Casinos. Presidential wannabes have stayed at Las Vegas Strip resorts, including Bellagio and the Venetian, but even they stayed the heck away from the casino floor.

John F. Kennedy, when he was a senator from Massachusetts, but also while he was running for president in 1960, did come close. He showed up at the Sands and kept company with Frank Sinatra and Judith Exner, a party girl and later mistress of two Chicago Outfit bosses. The Sands' bosses attached Exner to the future president to bottle him up and keep tabs on him. As the story goes, when Kennedy was elected president, emissaries from the White House showed up at the Sands, demanding whatever surveillance film and photographs the bosses had with Kennedy shown in them and wanting to know exactly whom he was with.

We can recall only one federal-level elected official patronizing a casino to gamble and it took a man of exceptional courage: the late Senator John McCain from Arizona. He was known to play craps in Las Vegas, particularly if he was in town for a boxing match, being a big fan of the sweet science. To his credit, his pugilistic enthusiasm didn't extend to mixed martial arts, which he memorably described as “human cockfighting.”

Oh, and don’t forget virtuecrat and canting hypocrite William Bennett (not to be confused with the casino owner of the same name). Bennett served as secretary of education from 1985 to 1988 under Ronald Reagan and was director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under George H. W. Bush; he's also the author of The Book of Virtues; drawing on stories from the Bible, American history, Greek mythology, English poetry, fairy tales, and modern fiction contains hundreds of examples of good and bad, right and wrong. Bennett was exposed as a compulsive slot player who’d lost $8 million in casinos while loudly deploring people “ruled by appetite.” The 2003 revelation canceled Bennett from his career in public life and ended his standing as America’s holier-than-all guardian of the public morality.

 

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Comments

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  • Stewart Ethier May-26-2024
    Obama
    McKee might have mentioned Obama's comment at a New Hampshire town hall:  "You don't blow a bunch of cash on Vegas when you're trying to save for college."

  • Raymond Ray May-26-2024
    No, but......
    Richard Nixon was a sitting President when he showed up on "LAUGH-IN" 

  • Glenn Leonberger May-26-2024
    McCain Loved Vegas
    Back in the early 2000s we took my niece to Vegas for her 21st birthday and stayed at the Bellagio.  The room was comped for Craps play after I learned about maximizing my play by reading Comp City.
    
    One of our big events was to see O and we ended up being seated next to Senator McCain.  Very nice guy - he was mostly quiet that night as he came in just a few minutes before the show started but you could see he thoroughly enjoyed being out on the town.
    
    The next day I was playing and noticed them setting up a new table next to ours, that included about 5 security guards keeping people back.  As soon as it was ready and the dealers were in place, McCain walked up to start to play.  Our entire table stopped playing and just watched him for about 10 minutes before we resumed our game.  He was really enjoying making his bets and tossing the dice - nothing unusual at all about him, just a guy playing craps who was smiling ear to ear as soon as the game started.
    
    All in all we had a fun week 

  • Gene Brown May-26-2024
    Hmmm!
    LoL! What about a sitting president that once owned a Casinooooo?!!

  • Henry May-28-2024
    According to Binion’s …
    Hotel casinos around town make many crazy claims about their history, and my favorite is when Binion’s claimed that Franklin Roosevelt spent the night at the Apache (Binion’s) in 1935. 

  • Raymond May-28-2024
    Nixon
    I read that Nixon appeared on Laugh-In when he was running for President in 1968, not when he was President.  I don't remember, even though I was devoted to that show.
    
    Nixon didn't watch the show and didn't understand what "Sock it to me" was about, but his advisors told him it would help him, so he did it.  I remember it was a surprise to the viewers, and certainly the topic of conversation at my junior high the next day.  "No, seriously, Nixon was on 'Laugh-In' last night.  I swear!"