Sports gambling is inherently a states’ rights issue, as recognized by the United States Supreme Court in recent pivotal cases, such as the 2018 seminal case, Murphy v. NCAA. In Murphy, the Court found that a provision in Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), a federal law regulating state sports gambling, that restricted a state’s ability to repeal its own sports betting legislation unconstitutionally commandeered state legislatures. Following this 2018 ruling, and the addition of President Trump appointed justices, the Court has consistently reaffirmed state’s rights, from employment contracts to sports gambling. As states, voters, and sports organizations, like the NCAA and the NFL, push to legalize sports betting, especially with the rise of Daily Fantasy Sports, more legal challenges to PASPA will inevitably arise. So, with President Trump’s states’ rights bias and its reflection in his appointments to the Supreme Court, the end of PASPA is near and states’ rights will ultimately win.