AAP
A trial of pokies precommitment technology for the ACT appears sunk after Canberra clubs voted against participating until after the federal election.
Clubs ACT boss Jeff House said 23 of his members met on Thursday afternoon to discuss the fate of the trial.
Mr House said they unanimously agreed not to start the trial until after the September 14 poll date.
The coalition, which doesn't support mandatory precommitment measures for pokies, is likely to dump the trial if it wins government.
Mr House said Clubs ACT would continue to work with the current government on preparations for a trial, although he conceded it may never happen.
"It would be a folly to expend the money and resources on starting the trial if it was only going to be cut halfway through by an incoming coalition government," Mr House told AAP.
"Far better to wait until the election result is known."
A trial of the system was only needed because the government of the day wanted to pursue mandatory precommitment as a policy.
"There's no point running a trial if a government of the day doesn't support mandatory precommitment," he said.
Under the watered down anti-gambling measures passed by parliament last year, there was only a passing reference to the trial and no powers to compel clubs to participate.
Mr House blamed Tasmanian independent MP Andrew Wilkie and the Greens interference for delaying the trial, which was originally due to start in February, 2013.
Mandatory precommitment technology requires gamblers to nominate the amount of money they are prepared to lose on high-loss machines, which can chew through $1200 an hour.
Comment has been sought from Families Minister Jenny Macklin.
Anti-gambling campaigner and independent senator Nick Xenophon described the club's decision as a "cynical self-serving move to stall reform".
"They were the ones that ran an hysterical fear campaign that caused the delay in the first place," he told AAP.
"I've got to give Clubs ACT full marks for sheer brashness. They're reinventing history."
Senator Xenophon said there could be a silver lining, with focus now shifting to the alternative $1 maximum bets concept.
"The industry doesn't tell tall stories; they tell stall stories," Senator Xenophon said.
Opposition families spokesman Kevin Andrews says the trial is completely dead.
"Labor's betrayal of Andrew Wilkie is complete," Mr Andrews told AAP.
A spokesman for Ms Macklin said the ACT trial had been "delayed" because of stalled negotiations to pass the federal legislation.
He said the government and Clubs ACT had started critical preparation work for the trial.
"We look forward to continuing to work with Clubs ACT and the ACT government on the trial," the spokesman said.
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