Predatory Gambling in Illinois Continues to Expand
 
Predatory Gambling in Illinois Continues to Expand
Written By David E. Smith   |   01.22.26

When the state promotes gambling as public policy, it crosses a dangerous line from regulator to predator. Government-sanctioned gambling is not a neutral form of entertainment; it is a revenue strategy built on predictable human weakness. Lotteries, casinos, and sports betting are deliberately designed to exploit behavioral vulnerabilities—impulsivity, addiction, and false perceptions of risk—in order to extract money from citizens- money that would otherwise go toward supporting families and paying bills.

Revenue from gambling depends disproportionately on repeat losses by a small segment of the population, many of whom are lower-income, financially insecure, or already struggling—in other words, people desperately searching for a jackpot. The state tries to balance its books by offering false hope and playing the odds against its own citizens, those it’s obligated to protect. The result is a system that manufactures losers, often among those who can least afford to lose.

This makes gambling uniquely predatory as public policy. Government uses its authority, advertising power, and legal monopoly to normalize an activity that undermines family stability, personal responsibility, and economic mobility—then claims the proceeds serve the “public good.” Funding public services through addiction, despair, and false hope is neither just nor sustainable. A government that profits from the self-destruction of its people violates its duty to promote the general welfare and protect the vulnerable. Public policy should strengthen citizens, families and communities, not treat them as revenue streams to be harvested through engineered loss.

In his Chicago’s Morning Answer radio program, Dan Proft explores the problem of government-sponsored gambling:

YouTube video

Illinois’ embrace of video gambling has been dramatic: from fewer than 8,000 VGTs in FY 2013 to nearly 50,000 by FY 2025. Here is the breakdown:

2012: 0 VGTs 2019: 32,033 VGTs
2013: 7,920 VGTs 2020: 36,145 VGTs
2014:17,467 VGTs 2021: 40,157 VGTs
2015:20,730 VGTs 2022: 43,128 VGTs
2016:23,891 VGTs 2023: 45,987 VGTs
2017: 26,873 VGTs 2024: 48,176 VGTs
2018:29,283 VGTs 2025: 49,282VGTs
   

The explosion of slot machines across Illinois has not improved the state’s budget condition, nor has it produced meaningful economic stability. What it has produced is more victims.

As gambling access has expanded, so has evidence of harm. Calls to the Illinois Gambling Helpline have surged, reflecting the predictable consequences of state-sanctioned gambling.

In June 2022, the Illinois Department of Human Services published a statewide assessment estimating that 3.8 percent of adult Illinoisans—approximately 383,000 people—already suffer from a gambling problem, with another 7.7 percent considered at risk. That represents a vast population vulnerable to addiction and financial ruin, precisely the group from which gambling revenues are disproportionately drawn.

When the state expands access to gambling, it knowingly increases the pool of people harmed by addiction, financial ruin, and false hope. That is not an accident of policy — it is the predictable outcome.


David  E. Smith
Dave Smith is the executive director of Illinois Family Institute (501c3) and Illinois Family Action (501c4). Follow Dave on X: @ProFamilyIL David has almost 35 years of experience in public policy and grass-roots activism that includes countless interviews for numerous radio, television, cable programs and newspaper articles on topics such as the sanctity of life, natural marriage, broadcast decency, sex education, marijuana, gambling, abortion, homosexuality, tax policy, drug decriminalization and pornography. He and his wife of 30 years are blessed to be the parents of eight children, whom they homeschool. They strongly believe that their first duty before God is...
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