From The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject How Congress refused to save the NCAA from itself
Date February 9, 2026 11:05 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Monied interests vs. college athletes. Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here to get The Daily Prospect Monday through Friday. [link removed]

[link removed]

**FEBRUARY 9, 2026**

Click to read this email in your browser. [link removed]

As a lifelong college football fan, I’ve watched the game transform from a sport dominated by a few teams into an exciting and unpredictable phenomenon. Watching Indiana win the national championship was the culmination of a path toward parity that began with the Supreme Court breaking up the NCAA cartel in 2021. The NCAA nearly reversed that progress when it pushed Congress to vote on the SCORE Act last year. This piece [link removed] explains what the SCORE Act would have done and why it failed.

**–Katherine Van Dyck, senior fellow, American Economic Liberties Project**

[link removed]

Cristian Mera for The American Prospect

How Congress Refused to Save the NCAA From Itself [link removed]

If you watched a minute of college football this fall, you saw the ads [link removed]. A voice-over darkly warns that, without congressional action, college sports face an existential crisis. NIL is forcing schools to cut women’s sports and Olympic programs. The very fabric of amateur athletics is unraveling. The solution, viewers are told, is the SCORE Act. It would solve the crisis, though it’s not really explained how.

In reality, the SCORE Act was a desperate attempt by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and its members to clean up their own mess. The solution being peddled would take away the only tools college athletes have to protect their economic rights: the antitrust and labor laws that protect every other working American from corporate consolidation and abuses of power.

The NCAA and its member conferences say that their “educational mission” justifies special treatment from Congress. But that educational mission hasn’t stopped conferences from expanding across the country, forcing college athletes [link removed] to spend more time in airport terminals than in classrooms. That mission didn’t stop schools from paying football coaches [link removed] tens of millions while pleading poverty. And it certainly didn’t stop the NCAA from punishing athletes for accepting $3.83 worth [link removed] of extra pasta while ruling that years of fake classes [link removed] for UNC athletes fell outside its jurisdiction.

Ultimately, the NCAA’s hypocrisy became unbearable in Washington. In December, Republican leadership pulled the SCORE Act from the House floor, defeated by an unlikely coalition of conservative Republicans who saw it as corporate welfare, progressive Democrats who recognized it as an attack on worker rights, a bipartisan group of state attorneys general defending public institutions, and the Congressional Black Caucus, which refused to help strip protections from predominantly Black athletes whose labor generates billions in revenue from college football and basketball games. It was a rare legislative victory against the powerful monied interests of college athletics.

Continue reading this story [link removed]

prospect.org/donate

****ON OUR SITE****

The nation’s most Democratic state might elect a Trump-friendly governor [link removed].

Corporate interests are dominating [link removed] the organization planning the reconstruction of Gaza.

[link removed]

Read more about the [link removed]

IDEAS, POLITICS, and POWER [link removed]

that shape the world around us at [link removed]

prospect.org [link removed]

Copyright (c) 2026 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.**The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States**
You are receiving this newsletter because you have signed up for our service.
To opt out of American Prospect membership, donation or advertising messaging, click here [link removed].
To manage your newsletter preferences, click here [link removed].
To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, click here [link removed].

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

Sent to: [email protected]

Unsubscribe [link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis