Christina Rees (Neath) (Lab/Co-op) I beg to move, That this House
has considered e-petition 649894 relating to financial risk checks
for gambling. It is, as always, a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Sir Edward. The petitioners ask the Government
specifically to stop the implementation of affordability and
financial risk checks, saying: “We want the Government to abandon
the planned implementation of affordability checks for some people
who want...Request free trial
(Neath) (Lab/Co-op)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petition 649894 relating to
financial risk checks for gambling.
It is, as always, a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Sir Edward.
The petitioners ask the Government specifically to stop the
implementation of affordability and financial risk checks,
saying:
“We want the Government to abandon the planned implementation of
affordability checks for some people who want to place a bet. We
believe such checks—which could include assessing whether people
are ‘at risk of harm’ based on their postcode or job title—are
inappropriate and discriminatory.”
The Government have responded:
“We are committed to a proportionate, frictionless system of
financial risk checks, to protect those at risk of harm without
over regulating. The Gambling Commission will set out plans in
due course.”
There are, however, a number of perspectives on the purpose and
delivery of such checks. I will do my best to present those to
the Chamber today.
For context, the Gambling Act 2005 regulates gambling in Britain.
On 8 December 2020, the Government published a review whose
purpose was to examine whether the Act provided the right balance
of regulation in the digital age. The review had about 16,000
responses. The Government response, in the form of the White
Paper, “High stakes: gambling reform for the digital age”, was
published on 27 April 2023. The proposals for the reform of
online gambling included new obligations on operators to perform
financial risk checks
“if a customer’s gambling is likely to be unaffordable and
harmful.”
The documented stated that three types of risk would be targeted:
binge gambling, significant unaffordable losses over time, and
financially vulnerable customers.
The arguments for and against the implementation of the checks
can be categorised according to three stakeholder groups:
industry, reformers and consumers. I will present the case of
each in turn, following several extensive evidence sessions with
a range of individuals and organisations including the petition
creators, the Jockey Club, the Betting and Gaming Council,
Charlie Ritchie from Gambling with Lives, Dr James Noyes and the
Gambling Commission.
Taking the gambling industry first, I understand the concerns
that operators might have about the impact of checks on profits,
not least because the top 10% of gamblers deliver 80% of operator
revenue. In horseracing, the numbers are even more stark, with
85% of operator income coming from about 5% of online betting
accounts. Operators argue that affordability checks are
inappropriate and discriminatory, that in theory punters would be
prevented from betting more than £1.37 per day, and that such
checks push vulnerable gamblers into the black market. It has
been suggested that online turnover is down 20% since
non-statutory checks have been in place.
The issue of affordability is not a new one, though. The industry
itself pushed for measures back in 2019 and has continued to
recognise the need for regulation and markers of harm. The
Government flagged an affordability check as a priority long
before the White Paper, and the Gambling Commission has already
consulted on it and accommodated it within changes to regulation.
What is new is that since the White Paper was published, the
Government and the Gambling Commission have proposed actual
figures for such checks. Affordability is no longer abstract; it
is tied to precise thresholds.
What are those thresholds? The Gambling Commission has consulted
on two forms of check: first, background checks for financial
vulnerability at moderate levels of spend, with proposed
thresholds of £125 net loss within a month or £500 net loss
within a year; and secondly, checks for harmful binge gambling or
sustained unaffordable losses at higher levels of spend, with
proposed thresholds of £1,000 net loss within 24 hours or £2,000
net loss within 90 days. In other words, the checks are
threefold: for financial vulnerability, for significant losses
over a short time, and for significant losses over a long
time.
Background checks for financial vulnerability will be
frictionless, using publicly available information such as credit
reference data and negative indicators such as county court
judgments or insolvency notices, while higher risk accounts will
have enhanced checks using open banking and other options, with
increasing degrees of intrusion the further into the journey that
someone goes. It is said that the enhanced checks will be
narrowly targeted, with only around 3% of online gambling
accounts being affected; the vast majority of these checks will
be frictionless, with the Gambling Commission advocating
light-touch assessment, applying the data minimisation principle
and focusing on publicly available data. Only 0.3% of account
holders would be expected to hand over additional financial
information. Industry bodies and operators point to checks that
are already happening and suggest that they are far from
frictionless, but these checks were introduced voluntarily by
individual operators, and tare not necessarily the frictionless
procedures being developed by the Government.
The second group of stakeholders are reformers, and they include
researchers, campaign groups and the Government themselves. They
have long supported the call for affordability checks on the most
vulnerable gamblers and harmful betting, saying they are needed.
The reformers point to the research showing the disproportionate
nature of gambling, whereby 80% of profits come from 10% of
accounts, and highlight the well-accepted belief that
disproportionate profits lead to harmful losses. In addition,
campaign groups are keen to point out that different forms of
gambling carry different risks. Activities such as playing bingo
or the national lottery, or even the vast majority of horserace
betting, are vastly different from activities such as gambling in
online casinos in terms of the experience and potential for
harm.
(Ludlow) (Con)
I congratulate the hon. Member on securing this significant
debate; she can tell from the number of Members here in
Westminster Hall today that there is a great deal of interest in
the subject from across the House.
The hon. Member just mentioned horseracing. Will she press the
Minister to give what reassurances he can to the horseracing
community—I speak for Ludlow racecourse, which is an important
employer and source of entertainment in my constituency, well
known to Opposition Members—that this industry will not
inadvertently be threatened by measures to introduce the
affordability checks for vulnerable gamblers that I think we all
want?
I thank the right hon. Member for making that very valid point. I
am sure that the Minister is listening, as he always does.
(Epsom and Ewell) (Con)
I am grateful to the hon. Member for giving way and allowing me
to reinforce the point just made by my right hon. Friend the
Member for Ludlow (). I represent Epsom Downs
racecourse and more particularly the training industry in Epsom.
In a smaller centre, in which the owners are not wealthy Arabs
but simply people who enjoy participating in racing, the impact
on the trainers of measures that really damage the industry would
be enormous. It is not just about the racecourse; it is about the
livelihoods of the people who do the training and who operate the
training stables. Will the hon. Member impress on the Minister
that there are genuine problems around things like online
casinos, but tackling those must not come at the expense of the
racing industry, which is so important to so many communities
across the country?
I thank the right hon. Member for making another valid point. I
am sure the Minister listened and will respond in due course. The
number of hon. Members who have turned up to speak is an
indication of how important this topic is to our constituents and
constituencies.
As I was saying, activities like playing bingo or the national
lottery, and even the vast majority of horseracing betting, are
vastly different from online casinos and fruit machines in terms
of the experience and potential for harm. Researchers understand
the importance of carefully considering the figures around the
threshold for checks. They need to be appropriate, but also
meaningful and preventative. Campaigners rebut the claim that
such checks are inappropriate by pointing out that checks that
reduce harm are highly appropriate. An example often cited is
that people would not want to produce documentation to purchase a
gin and tonic; that is true, of course, but there are many
examples where the family of a harmful drinker might ask their
local shop not to sell alcohol to them or, indeed, where someone
is refused another drink because they are drunk. Nor are the
checks discriminatory: they are no different from the checks
undertaken almost instantly when a consumer clicks to purchase a
product online using the Klarna three-payments procedure.
Finally, we must consider the voice of the consumer—the punter.
Most gambling is not harmful and most bets are small,
proportionate and affordable, such as a lucky dip on the lotto, a
lucky 15 on the horses or a flutter once a year on the grand
national.
Kate Kniveton (Burton) (Con)
Many of my constituents enjoy the time-honoured tradition of
having a bet at the races at the fantastic Uttoxeter racecourse
in my patch. They are concerned that the proposals for an annual
£500 net loss threshold, which, as the hon. Lady has already
said, equates to just £1.37 a day, will lead to intrusive checks,
limiting their freedom to spend their money on an activity of
their choosing. Does she agree that if affordability checks are
to be implemented, they should be carefully and deliberately
targeted at those who are most at risk of harm?
I thank the hon. Member for her intervention. I am getting a tour
of constituency racecourses—this little woman from Wales is
learning all about geography today. I agree that the proposals
should be measured.
The proposed checks will not affect such customers at all. It is
important not to conflate the views of industry with the views of
consumers. Affordability checks are not about attacking consumer
rights or curbing individual liberties, but about upholding
consumer protections and curbing operator excess.
Sir (North Herefordshire) (Con)
The hon. Lady says it is not about anything other than protecting
consumers, but can she think of any other activity where the
Government check how much money someone has?
Payday loan sharks might be an example, but I am sure the
Minister will respond in due course—I think I slipped out of that
one, or I tried to. The responsibility lies with industry and
operators, not customers.
In summary, it is understandable that industry bodies, operators
and the horseracing community have concerns about the
introduction of financial risk checks, but the idea of
introducing checks is not new, and the need for regulation
against harmful betting is supported by industry and consumers
alike. The issue seems to be that such checks need to be
frictionless, without negative impact on punters or operator
revenue, and without pushing vulnerable gamblers into the black
market. It would be useful if the Minister took this opportunity
to outline how frictionless checks will work and when pilot
schemes will be introduced.
(in the Chair)
I remind Members that they should bob if they wish to be called.
We have three hours, which is quite a long time, but I want to
get everybody in and I do not want to impose a time limit at the
moment. Perhaps, those who are called early can look around them,
see that a lot of people are trying to take part in this debate,
and keep their speeches brisk, which is always the best policy,
and certainly not take more than 10 minutes. I am sure that I can
rely on the first Member I call, , to give a brisk speech.
4.45pm
(Shipley) (Con)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Sir Edward. I am not
renowned for brisk speeches, but I will try my best. I am sure
the people of Market Rasen are delighted to see you taking such
an interest in this debate.
I start by referring people to my entry in the Register of
Member’s Financial Interests: I have occasionally accepted
hospitality from the betting industry and the horseracing
industry; I am an unpaid board member of the Racehorse Owners
Association; and as I always mention on these occasions, I am the
modest owner of racehorses and the owner of modest
racehorses.
I thank the hon. Member for Neath () for opening the debate and
the Petitions Committee as a whole for allowing it to take place.
I particularly thank Nevin Truesdale from the Jockey Club for
launching this petition and everyone who signed it, enabling this
debate to take place. I the Racing Post, which not only did a
tremendous job getting behind the petition but has done sterling
work in highlighting the damage that the proposed affordability
checks could do to punters and the sport of horseracing. I also
commend the Minister, my constituency neighbour, who inherited
this policy and whose engagement with all stakeholders has been
exemplary.
Let me make it clear at the outset that I am speaking up for two
groups today: one is the horseracing industry, but first and
foremost I am speaking up for punters—the people who have been
largely ignored in this long-running debate and tug-of-war over
affordability checks. They often get caught up in the crossfire
of the arguments between the well-funded betting industry and the
well-funded anti-gambling campaigners.
I have no intention of speaking up for bookmakers, partly because
most of them in the industry are big enough to speak up for
themselves, and partly because their position on stake
restrictions is inconsistent—that is the kindest word I can use.
On the one hand, bookmakers say it is wrong for the state to
restrict how much people can gamble; on the other hand, though,
they are the most guilty of all of restricting the stakes of
punters who have the audacity to back too many winners, often to
pennies rather than pounds. I have warned them time and again
that trying to have their cake and eat it on punter restrictions
would backfire. Until they abandon that anti-punter mentality,
what they say on this issue will always be subject to some level
of ridicule.
The principle that people should only bet what they can afford is
not a controversial one. It is the first piece of advice that any
of us would give to anyone who starts betting. However, what the
Government and the Gambling Commission are proposing is
completely unacceptable. They propose frictionless checks for
people who have a net spend of just £125 over a rolling 30-day
period, or £500 in a year, with enhanced checks taking place for
anyone with a net loss of £1,000 in 24 hours or £2,000 over 90
days.
I have a number of concerns about that approach, both practically
and in principle. I find it somewhat offensive that the
Government and the Gambling Commission believe that there is
something inherently distasteful about betting. If that is not
the case, why are the Government proposing that type of
affordability check just on gambling? Why do they not ask every
retailer in the country to carry out similar checks on customers
to ensure that they can afford to buy whatever they come to the
counter with? Is the Minister really claiming that nobody spends
more on alcohol than is good for them, more on shoes than they
should, or more on holidays than they can actually afford?
Sir (New Forest East) (Con)
My hon. Friend does not even need to talk about products that are
that addictive. As one of my constituents has pointed out, no one
checks on him if he spends £150 on a dinner for two people. Would
he accept that, even if the principle is conceded that there
should be some checks, the level at which this has been set is
far too low?
I very much agree with my right hon. Friend, as I happily do on
most things. Of course people spend more than they should on all
those other things, but the Government are snobbishly only
treating punters as some kind of pariah, which I do not
appreciate.
In Parliament, we should stand up for people’s freedoms. I was
not elected to Parliament to stop everyone else doing all the
things I do not happen to like myself, but some Members seem to
think their job is to do nothing other than that. It is
unacceptable that the Government, the Gambling Commission and the
bookmakers will basically, between them, decide how much each
individual punter can afford to spend on their betting, and the
punter gets virtually no say whatsoever. It is completely
outrageous. The Conservative party used to believe in individual
freedom and individual responsibility, and some of us still
do.
If we asked how much responsibility each group should take for
determining how much somebody can afford to spend on betting, I
doubt anyone would say that the individual concerned should have
0% responsibility, but that is the route down which we are in
danger of going. It is absurd to think that bookmakers and
regulators should be able to decide how much each individual
person in the country should be allowed to spend on betting. When
people open an online betting account or the next time they log
in, perhaps they should be forced to enter how much they want to
limit their spend over a fixed period. The responsibility for
ensuring that they do not go over that should rest with the
bookmaker, but not the decision as to how much they can afford in
the first place.
(Windsor) (Con)
Does it not strike my hon. Friend that there is a degree of
hypocrisy, when a large proportion of problem gamblers who really
are in great difficulty are just using national lottery
scratchcards? The figure is about four times higher than that for
those who gamble on horseracing.
I know that my hon. Friend is a big supporter of Windsor
racecourse in his constituency. I will come on to that later. I
hope you will think about the interventions I am taking, Sir
Edward. I do not want to get in trouble.
(in the Chair)
You can have injury time if you want, Mr Davies.
Thanks.
Thankfully, readers of the Racing Post and punters still believe
in the timeless Conservative principle of individual
responsibility. In a recent poll of punters carried out by the
Racing Post, when asked who they thought was best placed to
assess whether their betting is affordable, 96.6% said that they
were, 1.8% said the Gambling Commission, 1% said bookmakers and
0.6% said the Government. If that is not a giant raspberry to the
proposed affordability checks, I do not know what is.
Everyone knows that the problem gambling rates in the UK are
extremely low, and certainly do not justify anything remotely
close to what is being proposed. However, it is also pretty
obvious to most people with common sense that the affordability
checks are likely to make things worse for people with a gambling
addiction, rather than better. Does anyone seriously think that
anyone who has a serious gambling addiction, if and when they are
told by online bookmakers that they are no longer allowed to bet
with them, will just stop betting completely? It is pretty
obvious that those people will do all they can to carry on with
their addiction, and that will mean going to the black market
where there are no controls on people’s behaviour.
(Inverclyde) (SNP)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
The hon. Gentleman will have the opportunity to have his say
later, and I am anxious about Sir Edward’s strictures.
The Gambling Commission has always said that the threat from the
black market is overstated, while at the same time, like most
quangos, telling the Government that it needs more money to
tackle it. I hope the Minister will make it clear that he does
not underestimate the threat from the black market. Only today,
the front page of the Racing Postshows the results of a special
investigation into The Post Bookmakers—an unregulated firm with
1,300 customers—which said it was expecting a ridiculously busy
Cheltenham and recommended that a customer deposited as much as
they could. How on earth can making it more likely for people to
go to firms like that possibly help to tackle problem
gambling?
The wonderful sport of horseracing derives much of its income
from the gambling industry, so the more people go to the black
market, the less money there is for the sport of horseracing.
British racing is the best and most prestigious in the world. It
is the second biggest spectator sport in the UK after football,
brings a huge amount of foreign investment into the country and
is a huge part of the rural economy. It also provides a huge
amount of pleasure to millions of people across the country. The
Government cannot possibly allow themselves to introduce
measures—however well meaning —that will have a devastating
effect on this great sport.
Some 24,000 racehorse owners in the UK invest more than £500
million into the rural economy. They pay £32 million a month in
training fees, employing over 350 racehorse trainers who employ
some 80,000 people. The least they should be allowed is to have a
bet on their own horses as well. We cannot allow decisions to be
made that put that investment at risk.
However much I would like the Government and the Gambling
Commission to abandon the affordability check policy, I have not
been here so long without accepting that some battles are
impossible to win. I therefore accept that the Government may
feel that they have invested too much in the affordability check
debate to be able to abandon it completely. I have suggestions
for the Minister that might help make the policy less bad, and I
hope he will consider them.
The Government have said that they want financial checks to be
frictionless, but as envisaged the checks would be anything but.
First of all, will the Minister pledge to ensure that any checks
will be based on net deposits, not gross deposits? That would
make a material difference. Secondly, it is envisaged that
enhanced affordability checks will be based on current account
turnover, or CATO, data. That is used primarily by loan
industries to determine whether a customer can afford a loan. It
focuses on money flowing in and money flowing out of an
individual’s account. That is precisely the wrong kind of test,
as it second-guesses in a subjective manner what someone can
afford.
CATO does not consider financial vulnerability and is extremely
unhelpful when it comes to people with irregular money flows such
as the self-employed, entrepreneurs and individuals with high
wealth but low income. Will the Minister pledge not to use CATO
data for those reasons? If he insists on going ahead with
affordability checks, will he use SCOR data instead, from the
Steering Committee on Reciprocity? SCOR data is much more
appropriate as it shows if someone is showing signs of financial
vulnerability and distress. It flags people who are falling
behind on the rent or those with missed mortgage payments,
defaults on loans and so on. Crucially, the checks are entirely
frictionless and do not discriminate against any group, such as
the self-employed.
When the Government envisaged affordability checks, surely that
is what they had in mind—checking that people were not resorting
to gambling to try to win the mortgage payment that they had
fallen behind on, rather than trying to second-guess what each
individual could afford to spend on gambling. I look forward to
the Minister’s response to that suggestion. Will he also make
clear where anti-money laundering checks will fit in with the
affordability check regime?
If the Government insist on affordability checks, I have another
suggestion: to differentiate between games of skill and games of
chance—that is, to separate sports betting from online slots and
roulette. Horseracing is not a game of chance and in my view
should not be treated as such. Incredibly, as my hon. Friend the
Member for Windsor () made clear, the Government
envisage that some games of chance will be treated more
favourably than games of skill. I do not think that the national
lottery will be subject to affordability checks—it cannot
possibly be right that people who bet on horseracing will but
people who bet on the lottery will not. Will the Minister confirm
that that will not be the case or give an explanation of why it
will?
Not including the national lottery in such measures would
indicate a disregard for the people losing money and an interest
only in the people winning money. If the concern is about problem
gamblers, why is it okay if they have lost all their money to the
lottery, just because that money goes to good causes rather than
bookmakers? The national lottery must be included in all the
measures in the White Paper.
I end, Sir Edward, where I began: by urging the Minister to look
after the interests of all punters to ensure that nothing is done
to threaten the horseracing industry, which will never forgive
the Government otherwise, and to stand up for the key
Conservative principle of individual freedom and individual
responsibility. It is not too late to snatch victory from the
jaws of defeat.4.58pm
(Swansea East) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Edward. I
congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Neath () on leading this petition
debate.
It is an honour to speak about a topic that I am truly passionate
about: reducing gambling harm and protecting the most vulnerable.
According to the Gambling Commission, 22.5 million people in this
country gamble, which equates to about 44% of the adult
population. The overwhelming majority do so without any issue,
but not everyone. When it comes to those for whom gambling is an
addiction, the Gambling Commission and the Government have a duty
to act responsibly and protect them from harm. The publication of
the long overdue gambling White Paper last April was therefore
widely welcomed by the all-party parliamentary group on gambling
related harm, which I chair, as well as by a growing community of
organisations, charities, academics and clinicians, all intent on
reducing gambling harm, protecting the vulnerable and saving
lives.
While concerns remain about the consultation times on the
proposals in the White Paper and how long it will subsequently
take us to get where we need to be, what is important today is
that we lay out why the changes are so critical—specifically, the
positive impact that affordability checks will have in reducing
harm and saving lives.
In its patterns of play research, the Gambling Commission
identified that the most profitable 1% of accounts make up 70.4%
of the gross gambling yield, echoing previous research from the
University of Liverpool. The gambling industry relies on a hugely
disproportionate percentage of its profits coming from those
affected by gambling addiction, who are subsequently harmed by
unaffordable losses.
Historically, the industry has recognised the need for
responsible gambling and ensuring that customers spend within
their means. In 2018—that seems a life-time ago—the Senet Group,
the industry standards body that was later absorbed into the
Betting and Gaming Council, set out three steps that responsible
gamblers should adhere to: only gamble what you can afford, set
limits and do not chase losses. Suggesting that someone gripped
by addiction would be able to make rational decisions on what is
affordable is naive. Nobody would even contemplate that for any
other addiction. The logical way forward would be to proactively
introduce affordability checks on anyone gambling larger
sums.
(Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
(Lab)
I thank my hon. Friend for giving way and congratulate her on the
work that she does on this matter. Does she agree that primarily
the focus should be on protecting the most vulnerable people in
our communities? It is not about being anti-gambling per se. The
industry has failed to act, which is why measures are needed to
protect the most vulnerable in our communities. It is a small
price to pay to protect those people.
I totally agree. Anti-gambling is one thing that I am not. I am
very fond of visiting the racetrack, as I am the bingo hall. My
motive does not come from being anti-gambling. I want to protect
vulnerable people.
The logical way forward would be to protect and proactively
introduce affordability checks on anyone gambling larger sums.
Those would not stop anyone who can afford it betting as much as
they choose, but it would stop those who cannot. After carefully
considering the evidence, the Government included a consultation
on two forms of affordability checks in their proposals in the
White Paper. The first would consist of background checks on
those spending moderate levels, which would look at financial
vulnerability. The proposed limits for the checks to be triggered
would be a net loss of £125 within a month or £500 within a
year.
The second would be a more enhanced check for those regularly
spending higher levels, which might indicate a binge gambling
problem. The proposed thresholds for them would be a £1,000 net
loss within 24 hours and £2,000 within 90 days—halved for those
aged between 18 and 24, given that that group has already been
identified as being at greater risk of harm.
Although many have jumped to condemn the checks, it is important
to be clear about who would be impacted by them. Recent research
conducted by Dr Philip Newall from the University of Bristol and
Dr David Zendle from the University of York using open banking
data found that the unharmed gamblers have an average monthly
spend of £16.41, compared with £208.91 for the highest risk
group. That suggests that risk-free gamblers would very rarely
trigger any affordability checks. If anything, the figures
highlight the fact that the proposed thresholds are far too high
and could be set at a lower level. To be clear, the initial
background checks of financial vulnerability would be
frictionless, using publicly available information such as credit
reference data alongside negative indicators such as county court
judgments and insolvency checks. The enhanced checks would
initially use open banking, with more intrusive checks only being
triggered further down the line.
It must also be put into perspective that the enhanced checks
would be narrowly targeted to around 3% of the online gambling
accounts affected. I can say at this point that it is the online
accounts that are key. Online is where the most harm is taking
place. It is where people—incredibly vulnerable people—can spend
money they just do not have, with no intervention, with no
contact with anyone that might notice a problem, and, until last
week’s announcement, without limits. Online is causing harm at
rates far in excess of any land-based venue, and it is important
that we keep that in mind. The APPG’s focus has always been on
that, and we have continually called for the likes of horseracing
tracks and bingo halls to be considered separately in
legislation.
For the 3% of affected online gambling accounts, the vast
majority of checks would be frictionless. The Gambling Commission
has already advocated for the focus of checks to be on publicly
available data. Research suggests that only 0.3% of account
holders would be subject to the level of checks that would
require them to hand over any additional financial information.
However, it seems that the smaller number of enhanced checks that
would require consent on the part of the individual are being
used as a scaremongering tactic to turn the debate on
affordability into a controversial topic. Given that those checks
have such a minimal impact, it is difficult to see why they have
been contested so vehemently.
We know that the industry has stirred up the controversy by
exaggerating the levels of intrusion and suggesting that the
checks would drive gamblers to the black market. That loses sight
of the whole point of the checks, which is to protect gamblers
from harm by ensuring that they are spending within their means.
Surely that is in the interest of the industry, which currently
has a reputation for allowing those unable to control their
gambling to gamble far in excess of what they can afford to
spend.
(Preseli Pembrokeshire)
(Con)
The hon. Lady is making some strong points, and she has done some
excellent work on this issue. When one talks to people who have
lived and are living with serious gambling addictions, what comes
across very strongly is the way they alter their behaviours to
avoid accountability and scrutiny, to the point of using multiple
identities. That being the case, is the hon. Lady confident that
these kinds of checks, some of which will be intrusive, as she
said herself, will drive the better outcomes we all hope to
see?
While we do not have all the answers now, that does not mean we
should not do anything to protect those who are vulnerable. It is
our responsibility to make sure that the system works to protect
vulnerable gamblers.
It is ironic that this is the same industry that just a few years
ago set out the three steps for responsible gambling, which
included only gambling what is affordable —the same industry that
still spends big bucks on “Safer Gambling” logos and promoting
safer gambling week. It seems to be a case of talking the talk,
but being totally unwilling to walk the walk and actually
implement the measures that could protect the most vulnerable
customers.
As I said at the beginning, we know that the vast majority of the
22.5 million people gambling in this country enjoy doing so
safely and within their own limits. Nobody, least of all me,
wants to prevent them from being able to do that. We have already
established that the number of people who could trigger a check
as a result of their spending, even if it is money they can
afford to spend, is negligible. The argument against
affordability checks is therefore very difficult to grasp, when a
slight inconvenience for a very small number of people will
protect many more.
The argument for affordability checks is comprehensive. It will
stop those gripped by addiction from gambling more than they can
afford. It will reduce the levels of harm we are seeing. It will
protect the industry’s most vulnerable customers. Most
importantly—and I say this because there are people in this room
today who have lost children because of this addiction—it will
save lives.
5.09pm
(Chingford and Woodford
Green) (Con)
It is a privilege to speak in this debate under your
chairmanship, Sir Edward. I apologise if I have to disappear
briefly at 6 o’clock for a charity meeting, but I pledge to be
back before the wind-ups.
The hon. Member—in this case, my hon. Friend—for Swansea East
() has made most of the
strong case that exists, but I want to touch on a few particular
points. It seems to me that this debate should not be for or
against affordability checks, and I do not think it really is. In
fact, my hon. Friend the Member for Shipley () invariably ends up being in
the right place on some of these points. He made the case,
rightly, for a debate about what levels there should be, how this
all works, and who should and should not be in. I thought that
was quite interesting.
I want to come back to my hon. Friend’s point about the need for
checks to be frictionless. I agree. If there are to be checks,
they need to be as frictionless and as unobtrusive as possible,
because they are about the early onset of issues and problems.
They should act as flags and be the nudge that says, “Something
isn’t right here”, rather than an absolute shutting down, as it
were.
My hon. Friend the Member for Shipley made three points,
including whether net deposits should be used or not, that CATO
checks will not work—I completely agree—and that score data is an
issue here; I also agree. All those points are really important,
and I recommend them to the Minister.
It is important to understand that I was never really in favour
of these checks originally, when I first started. However, having
spent time with the charities and people who have lost members of
their family, I think one point comes across time and again: if
there had been an early moment in the process when either the
people concerned had realised what they were up to or others had
been able to say, “Stop, stop! Where are you going with this?”,
many of those disasters would not have happened.
We need to look at the issue in the context of how we can stop
the early onset of addiction and the process that takes place, as
we would do with anything else. It is a human issue; it is not a
principle of freedom versus non-freedom. During many hundreds of
years in this place, we have dealt many times with issues where
absolute freedoms have had to be constrained to some degree, but
we limit that as much as we possibly can be. That is the case in
this process, which is why I think we should be able to settle on
that here.
First of all, I do not have a racecourse in my constituency, but
I used to have a dog track. It was a very famous dog track, but
it closed because the owners decided that they could make more
money through online gambling rather than allowing people to come
to the stadium and bet, which I had done in the past. I have to
say, I, like anybody—well, perhaps not everybody—like to go to
race meets, and I like to bet on horses because it makes it more
exciting. I always try and go to the ring to do that. Racecourse
owners have done no good to the ring, which is really proper
betting; in many cases, they have pushed it further and further
away from the smart stadiums. The people there were the ones who
would occasionally say to someone, “You know you’ve already bet
on this. Are you sure you want to put this bet?” I have had that
happen—no, I haven’t, but I have seen others get it on a number
of occasions, and I have stood up for them when they have had
these problems.
This is not about being against gambling; it is about being
against the untrammelled levels that affect those who are most
vulnerable. That is the key. Let us make very clear what is not
on the table. As things stand, there are no checks for on-course
bookmakers, and none are planned. I would be against that should
we decide to go down that road. This is important, and the same
point exists for land gambling. We are not planning to check or
stop that in the same way as online, which I will come back to in
a second.
(Devizes) (Con)
My right hon. Friend makes an important point about the need for
balance in this policy. Having spoken to a lot of the breeders
and trainers in my constituency in Wiltshire, I think there is a
very strong argument against these proposals. We have also heard
the case for them.
The fact that this debate is so well attended and that there is
so much controversy about these proposals suggests to me there is
a problem with the policy-making process. When I was a civil
servant at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and
Sport—in fact when my right hon. Friend the Member for West
Suffolk () was Secretary of State—I saw
how policy making is done, and I think there is a problem with
it.
The people who are the experts or are most likely to be affected
by the policies that we make here are not properly involved in
the deliberations that go into policy making. I wonder whether my
right hon. Friend agrees. Could he make the point to the Minister
that, given the degree of controversy over these proposals, we
need to delay the implementation and involve a wider group of
stakeholders and experts in the consultation, which should have
happened before now?
My hon. Friend has made his point through me to the Minister, who
I am sure will deal with it. I will say that the consultation did
not happen overnight—it has been going on for some time—but I
accept that others may think that they have not had enough time.
In fact, the gambling industry could have made a bigger impact by
taking full part, rather than not always wanting to be intruded
on by questions. As has happened with the group on many
occasions, many chose to stay away.
I also make the point that few people will be impacted by the
checks. Many of the concerns set out by punters involve the
checks that the industry is already carrying out. It intrudes
like mad on behaviour—that is the biggest area. It wants to deal
with the behaviour of punters because, as we have heard, the
gambling industry makes the vast majority of its money from those
who are losing money at a rate of knots.
In fact, my hon. Friend the Member for Shipley made an
interesting point, which I agreed with: often, those gamblers who
have been successful end up being blocked. That information
travels across the gambling companies, so a gambler who happens
to be moderately or very successful finds themselves taken off
the list of all those companies. They are not about openness,
freedom and choice; they are the last people to be interested in
that. We may be debating this, but they are not, because they do
not want to lose money themselves.
The important point is that the gambling industry itself has not
shown a huge amount of respect for the horseracing industry. Many
betting shops are encouraged to cross over to FOBTs, or
fixed-odds betting terminals, which are now B3s, and to SSBTs, or
self-service betting terminals, which allow cash remote betting
inside shops. The remote sector has long looked to cross-sell
away from horserace betting to betting on other sports.
One thing that I want to make absolutely clear is that the
gambling companies are not that interested in the success or the
future of horseracing per se, but just in how much money they can
take out of it. I am desperately keen that the horseracing
industry should thrive. I absolutely believe it offers huge
prospects for those in rural areas. It is a hugely successful and
now global industry, and no one supports it more than I do.
I will end this by saying simply that the debate should not be
about the absolute purity of no checks. We are here to look at,
first, what the levels are and, secondly, how intrusive they will
be. If we could achieve that and the right decision is made
finally by the Minister, that will mean that the situation will
be much better and, at the end of the day, that fewer people will
lose their lives or become so addicted because of the desperate
nature of what they have been doing in darkened rooms and behind
closed doors. We want to stop that and to save lives.
5.17pm
(Bath) (LD)
It is a pleasure to serve under you in the Chair, Sir Edward.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Neath () on introducing the debate,
which has already shown that this is very much a question of
balance. We recognise the problem of gambling and gambling
addiction, but we also understand that there are many forms of
gambling, and the majority of people speaking today are here
because we support horseracing and racecourses. We must ensure
that we try to stop harm, which we are all absolutely in favour
of doing, but do not put the baby out with the bathwater by
putting out of business the wonderful facilities in our
communities that enjoy so much support.
If affordability checks are to be implemented, they should be
carefully and deliberately targeted at those most at risk of
harm. We have already heard that exact sentence this afternoon.
We need to ensure that problem gambling does not ruin more lives.
We all believe in the need to protect people from gambling harms,
and reforms are overdue: the UK has 400,000 problem gamblers,
including some 60,000 children aged 11 to 16. Those figures are
stark.
My constituency, however, is lucky to enjoy an active and vibrant
horseracing scene. Bath is Britain’s highest flat racecourse,
with a distinguished history of racing going back to 1811. Racing
was first recorded in Bath in 1728, which is a reminder that
people did not go to Bath just to take the waters. Bath
racecourse is an incredibly important venue for the city. It
hosts more than 20 races each season but, much more, it is also a
venue for family days, live music and many other large-scale
events. It was also a vaccination hub during the pandemic. It is
an important employer and welcomes thousands of visitors.
Not surprisingly, many of my constituents have signed the
petition. British racing is particularly vulnerable to changes
made to gambling regulations and, as we have already heard many
times this afternoon, we must ensure that we get this right. The
racecourse has expressed concerns to me about proposed
affordability checks. It believes that a one-size-fits-all
approach will not work, and I echo that. Proposed affordability
checks currently will be the same for everyone, no matter how
much they can earn or what their disposable betting income
is.
Bath racecourse has welcomed Government assurances that most
consumers will not actively notice checks taking place. It is
right that checks will be frictionless, but Bath racecourse is
concerned that intrusive checks could put off punters, as we have
heard. I am not an expert—I do not own any moderately successful
racehorses—but occasionally I go to a race, and it is absolutely
true that it is fun to put a bet on a horse, because we are
invested in that horse. That is fine for most people. We should
absolutely ensure that that sort of betting is not intrusively
checked; that if somebody wins, they can bet and try their luck
again; and that we are not stopping all those types of betting or
the fun that people have at racecourses—the majority of people
have harmless fun.
The majority of gambling problems stem from people chasing their
losses and spending more than they can afford; I think I have
heard that about gambling addiction, although I am not an expert.
Ultimately, people get most excited by betting more if they have
lost something. In fact, we have also heard that when people are
winning, they are sometimes excluded from betting more. That is
absolutely not right.
We Liberal Democrats are adding something to this debate: we
would adopt a public health approach to gambling legislation. We
propose that there should be a soft cap on gambling losses set at
£100 per month. That proposed cap is much higher than the vast
majority of gamblers lose in a month, so occasional gamblers
would not be affected in any way and would not appear on any
database. As I have said, many gambling companies already require
financial data for gamblers to be able to open an account, so for
many who reach the £100 cap no additional information would be
required. If someone wished to bet beyond that loss limit, they
would be required to provide financial data to show that they can
afford to do so.
The affordability checks would be run separately from any
individual gambling company. There would be confidential sharing
of data between different gambling companies so that an
individual could not get close to the cap with several companies
at the same time. We need a single, independently run system of
affordability checks that treats people with dignity. Data
collected for that purpose would be held securely and
confidentially and solely for that purpose. The affordability
checks would not apply to cash gambling, for example, at
horseracing. Those are some proposals that the Minister might
have a look at.
It is important that there should be reform, but it is also
important that we get this right. It is particularly important to
me that such a wonderful facility as Bath racecourse is not
affected by a hammer approach to tackle the problem. That would
have unintended consequences and put wonderful community
facilities such as Bath racecourse out of business.
5.23pm
(West Suffolk) (Ind)
It is a pleasure to be able to speak in this debate, and I am
grateful to the hon. Member for Neath () for introducing it. I am
even more grateful to the more than 100,000 people who signed the
petition; it reached 100,000 people calling for the debate in
only 27 days. Some 1,200 of the signatures are from Newmarket in
my constituency—my constituency is called West Suffolk, but the
vast majority of the signatures are from Newmarket. Being here
feels like the start of a horse race as I am surrounded by so
many colleagues and it is so busy in here today. I have been
contacted by other Members, including two Ministers, who wanted
to speak in this debate but cannot, including my right hon.
Friend the Member for Stratford-on-Avon (), the former Chancellor. This
issue is huge and I do not want to leave the Minister with the
impression that affordability checks are a side issue; they are
absolutely central to the future of horseracing. We are making a
mistake, so we must stop and start again, and I will set out
why.
I bow to no one in caring about and paying regard to the problems
of gambling harms. I have seen them for myself; I have spoken to
those who have lost children to gambling. As the Culture
Secretary, I introduced the limits on fixed-odds betting
terminals, or FOBTs, which were far below the recommended rate. I
overruled the official advice to bring in the £2 limit, with the
support of the hon. Member for Swansea East () and my right hon. Friend
the Member for Chingford and Woodford Green ( ). We worked together on
that.
I care deeply about gambling harms and as both a former Culture
Secretary and a former Health Secretary, I understand them.
However, these proposals, as they are being introduced, will make
the gambling harms worse. The PwC report published recently
showed that the amount staked by UK online gamblers on the
unregulated market in 2020 had doubled to £2.8 billion in the
previous one to two years. In December 2022, more than 250,000
people visited unregulated black market sites, compared with only
80,000 during the same month the previous year. That has a huge
impact on horseracing, which I will come on to, but also on
gambling-related harm. Online casinos—games of chance rather than
games of skill—are a serious problem that need addressing. I
would recommend that the limit of £5 being proposed by some is
reduced to £2. We should be extremely tough on games of chance,
which are programmed algorithmically to ensure that people lose
money. I do not think anybody in this debate would oppose the
introduction of measures to resist those types of addictions, for
addictions they are.
As I say, I bow to nobody in my support for measures to tackle
problem gambling, but I am afraid to say that, having examined
the evidence, I am convinced that introducing these measures—not
just as they are being proposed, but as they are actually being
brought in—is increasing gambling harms and not decreasing them.
We should not fall for the old adage of, “We have a problem, and
we must do something; this is something, therefore we must do
it.” I am afraid to say that the current proposals will make
problems worse rather than reducing them.
Many of the offshore gambling firms explicitly target those
signed up to the GAMSTOP service and there is a grim irony that
the regulator and the Government are, unfortunately, making the
problem worse.
A couple of Members have said that the checks have already been
introduced by the industry; the hon. Member for Neath said that
they had already been introduced “voluntarily”. I am afraid to
say that I do not think that is true. The gambling industry, for
which I have absolutely no regard, is introducing checks now in
the shadow of expected future regulation, because it knows about
the Gambling Commission—indeed, it is regulated by the Gambling
Commission. These things are not being introduced “voluntarily”;
they are being brought in because the gambling companies think
that further regulation is coming down the track. We are already
seeing the negative impact in the uptake of black market offshore
gambling, as I have already said, and we are already seeing the
impact on the horseracing industry.
I am incredibly lucky to represent Newmarket. Horseracing is the
UK’s second largest sport, with 5 million racegoers annually,
generating over £4 billion for the economy and untold soft power.
In Newmarket, 7,000 people are employed in or around horseracing,
which puts a quarter of a billion pounds into the local economy.
In addition to all of that, it creates the joy that so many of us
have spoken about.
We know that 26% of bettors have already experienced an
affordability check, ahead of the proposals officially coming in.
We have seen that the betting turnover on racing fell by £900
million in 2022-23. The financial impact on the horseracing
industry is already happening. Prize money is going up in the
rest of the world but is incredibly tight in the United Kingdom.
The impact is biggest on the small racecourses, but there is even
an impact on Newmarket, which hosts the two finest racecourses in
the world.
Sir
One of the two!
I certainly will not have that challenged.
Sir
The industry estimates that this will cost it £50 million. Does
the right hon. Member agree that if we can separate the
challenges of problem gambling from the joy and importance of
horseracing, which employs 80,000 people, perhaps progress is
possible? However, at the moment that is not clear.
Absolutely. Horseracing already has its own legislative
framework; it has had it since Churchill introduced the Tote.
There is already in law a definition of and a separation of
horseracing. I recommend that the Government separate games of
chance, in which there is no skill and there are guaranteed
losses, from horseracing, which is one of this country’s finest
achievements and brings joy to so many.
Let me turn to “frictionless”, which we have heard a lot about. I
was thrilled when the Minister said at the Dispatch Box that
checks would be frictionless; he has said it here and he said it
in the White Paper. Here we come to something of a constitutional
point, if I may say so. The Gambling Commission has interpreted
the Minister saying checks will be frictionless as meaning
“frictionless for the vast majority”, which is different. These
checks, if they are to happen at all, should be frictionless. The
Minister has committed to that and it is Government policy, yet
we have a regulator wrongly misinterpreting “frictionless” as
“frictionless for the vast majority”. It is a distinct problem.
Also, if checks are frictionless, they have to be based on data
that people have already consented to make publicly available. If
somebody looks at one’s bank account details, there has to be
friction, because they will need permission to look at those
details, so there is already a problem with implementing
frictionless checks.
The hon. Member for Swansea East made the point that it is
difficult to see why people would worry about these checks or why
they would go to unregulated online sites. There are two
responses to that. The first is that people fear the Government
looking into their financial affairs. The second is a practical
point: it is happening. That is how people are responding to
these proposals. I know it is happening among my constituents,
because they tell me on the doorsteps. They are changing the way
they place bets, because of fears about what the Government are
going to look at. We need to recognise reality in this place. We
cannot just wish away people’s behavioural response, which is
making the tackling of problem gambling worse rather than
better.
Any jockey knows when a race is going wrong. I surely do. With
this one, I say to the Minister that it is time to return to the
stalls and start again.
5.33pm
(Sheffield Central)
(Lab)
I join others in congratulating my hon. Friend the Member for
Neath () on her thoughtful and
balanced introduction to the debate. I find it fascinating that
so many of the contributions to it have been about the
horseracing industry. I had to check the petition again, because
it mentions the horseracing industry only in the last sentence,
as an afterthought. We would all want to defend and protect the
horseracing industry, but I fear that in this debate it is being
used as a wedge by a gambling industry that is using something
for which there is great affection in order to prevent something
that is doing much wider harm.
I apologise for intervening on the hon. Member, but this has been
the case all along and in all the inquiries. The real damage lies
in the slots, the fast gambling and the speed of all those
chases, not in something that takes about four or five minutes to
finish. This is all about the speed of gambling and the incentive
to gamble quickly, quietly and in the darkness of one’s own
room.
I thank the right hon. Member, my friend in this context, for his
intervention. He has done such good work on this issue, and on
this point he is absolutely right.
I have become involved in gambling reform only in the past six
years or so, following the death of one of my constituents, Jack
Ritchie, as a result of gambling addiction. What I learned from
the tragedy of Jack’s death was that often when people take their
own lives it is because they are overwhelmed not by gambling
debt, but by the addiction itself. When I talked to Jack’s
parents, they were very clear—this echoes a point that the right
hon. Member has made—that if there had been checks, balances and
preventive measures in place at an early stage of Jack’s journey
into addiction, it could have transformed the tragic outcome when
he took his life.
Jack is not alone. According to Public Health England, over 400
people take their lives each year as a result of gambling. A
recent Gambling Commission survey, which I think has been
mentioned, found that 2.5% of the population—over 1.5 million
people—score over eight on the problem gambling severity
index.
The hon. Gentleman has repeated this line that over 400 people a
year die of suicide as a result of gambling—a figure that has
been discredited many times and with which the Gambling
Commission certainly would not align itself. Can he tell us how
he has arrived at that figure? What methodology has he gone
through? I think that when he does explain it, he will realise
that it is a discredited figure.
I was happy to take an intervention, in contrast with the hon.
Member’s approach earlier, but I was simply citing the figures
provided by Public Health England. I respect Public Health
England, as I am sure—
Will the hon. Gentleman give way on that point?
No, I will not.
The figures have been discredited, and it does not accept them
any more.
I am prepared to accept the figures from an established,
respectable national body.
But it does not accept those figures any more.
I do not think that this is—
(in the Chair)
Order. Let’s not have a private bit. Let’s get on with it.
I am very happy to get on with it. The point I was seeking to
make is that gambling addiction is a health issue. The NHS will
very shortly be opening a gambling harms clinic in my
constituency. It will join a network of 15 across the country
that are tackling the serious problem of gambling addiction. Hon.
Members have asked, “What requires an intervention? What is the
difference between gambling and going out and spending £150 on a
meal, shopping and other leisure activities?”, butI do not see
the NHS treating those activities as a serious health issue, as
it does with gambling addiction.
Will the hon. Gentleman give way? I am a former Health
Secretary.
I know that the right hon. Member is a former Health
Secretary.
I was the Secretary of State who introduced those gambling
clinics.
I know.
There was one beforehand. Will the hon. Gentleman address the
question of the extent to which we know that those gambling harms
are related to betting on horseracing—as opposed to these games
of chance, which are so aggressive and have algorithms designed
to promote addiction?
I am happy to have taken that intervention, because I was not
seeking to make that point. I was recognising the way in which
horseracing is being used as a wedge issue to tackle a different
problem, as has been echoed by the right hon. Member for
Chingford and Woodford Green ( ) and my hon. Friend the
Member for Swansea East (). There is a distinction,
and we should not let horseracing be used to undermine the
affordability checks that are needed in a different context.
The point I was making is that if this is a health issue, we need
to have a prevention strategy, just as we do with other health
problems. I commend the Government for the prevention strategy
that they have developed with the gambling White Paper.
Affordability checks are an important part of that strategy, but
it is regrettable that the debate around them is generating more
heat than light, as it has done today.
I can understand why, beyond racing, the gambling industry is
keen to avoid checks. As my hon. Friend the Member for Swansea
East pointed out, Gambling Commission research using the
“Patterns of Play” data confirms that the most profitable 1% of
accounts make 70.4% of gross gambling yield. Those are
disproportionate profits derived from small numbers of players,
who in many cases are gambling much more than they can afford to
lose. Those people need to be protected. We know that harm can
happen at relatively low levels of spend, so it is important that
affordability checks be set low enough to prevent harm.
I understand the fears behind the petition. It is important that
we spend time, as other colleagues have done, underlining how
unobtrusive checks can be and, I am confident, will be.
Affordability checks are nothing new, and contrary to suggestions
from the industry, background checks on financial vulnerability
could be frictionless, making use of already available data—data
that we should remember is already used by the industry itself to
monitor accounts and, in some cases, withhold winnings from
players to regulate their losses. The data is there, and the
industry is willing to use it in one context. Why not in this
context, too?
We know that in the case of enhanced checks, only 0.3% of account
holders would be expected to provide additional information—I
think that point was made earlier. That is a tiny number in
relation to the benefit that could be achieved through
introducing the checks. The vast majority of checks can be done
passively, using information that is in the public domain or
required for registering an account. My hon. Friend the Member
for Neath made the same point in her speech. It is also important
that checks be done by independent, reputable third parties
regulated by the FCA. We should bear that in mind, too.
I want to make a brief comment on the black market argument that
has started to come up. This is the last refuge of rogues,
really. When the tobacco industry had run out of every other
argument to stop regulation, it said, “But what about the black
market? Don’t do anything to us: it will force people to turn
into black market smokers”—and they did not. We saw a successful
public health strategy on tobacco. Payday lenders made the same
argument when affordability checks were introduced in their
sector, and we have not seen a significant movement from payday
lenders to black market loan sharks.
Claims about the potential growth of the black market following
more stringent regulations have been successfully challenged,
including by the Gambling Commission, whose powers to address the
issue of illegal sites will be further strengthened by provisions
in the Criminal Justice Bill. I understand the difficulties in
regulating the online world. We face rogue operators across the
online world, but if we are prepared to tackle them in other
spheres, why not in online gambling?
Affordability checks will play an important role. They must be
set independently rather than by the industry, and set at a level
that will protect those who need them most. I recognise that many
people enjoy betting safely and without harm, and we can and
should ensure that affordability checks are frictionless except
in the most extreme circumstances. We cannot lose sight of the
fact that affordability checks are about protecting people from
harm and ensuring that the gambling industry is regulated in the
right way.
I note the points made about things that have already been
happening. Those things are happening because the industry knows
that change is coming. If the industry had been left to its own
devices, we would never have seen those sorts of measures.
5.44pm
(Tewkesbury) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Edward. I
refer hon. Members to my entry in the Register of Members’
Financial Interests; I am also proud to be the Member of
Parliament for Cheltenham racecourse and—with the hon. Member for
St Helens North ()—the co-chair of the
all-party parliamentary group on racing and bloodstock.
I am afraid that I will have to disappoint the hon. Member for
Sheffield Central (), because I am going to
speak mainly about horseracing. I think the most recent estimate
is that Cheltenham racecourse brings in £278 million to the local
economy in just four days. Those four days are coming up very
soon, so I would be neglecting my duties if I did not speak from
a horseracing point of view.
May I thank the Minister for being always available for a meeting
to discuss the issue, and always willing to come to these
debates? I do not think he particularly enjoys them any more, but
he always turns up and listens. I thank him for everything he is
doing. I recognise that this issue was dropped on him by previous
Ministers; for that, he has my deepest sympathy.
I want to point out the relationship between betting and
horseracing, which is not always obvious. The figure varies, but
something like 40% of racing’s income comes from betting
companies through the levy, media rights and sponsorship. I also
want to explode the myth that horseracing is a rich sport; it is
referred to as the sport of kings, and several monarchs have
indeed taken a deep interest, but it is very poorly funded. If we
look at the top 1%, there may be a lot of money there, but if we
look at the whole pyramid, we find that it is not well funded at
all. Racehorse owners—I am not one of them—are the unsung heroes
of racing. They lose so much money that I am surprised that they
continue at all, but they do.
Let me cite some figures from yesterday’s racing. At Hereford,
the average prize money was £4,342. Not many miles away, at Naas
in Ireland, the average was £12,479. Two races in France
yesterday averaged £27,000. Hong Kong was almost off the scale:
the average was £154,620. We can see from that how very poorly
horseracing is funded in this country. That has a knock-on effect
on stable staff, jockeys and trainers, who are all far from
rich—quite the reverse, believe me. Although British racing is
the best in the world, it is probably almost the most poorly
funded.
Racing cannot take any more financial setbacks. Racing and
betting have come together on this issue like never before,
because they know that they face the greatest ever threat to
their existence. I am not exaggerating when I say that. Imagine
the UK without the Grand National, the Derby, Royal Ascot or the
Cheltenham Gold Cup: they are magnificent, iconic races and the
UK would not be the same without them. I have to say that the
changes to the levy that are being discussed would not compensate
for the losses that racing could face as a result of the
affordability checks. Quite the reverse: to use an old political
phrase, it would be a double whammy.
The hon. Gentleman is talking about industry funding, but what
about the boat race, Wimbledon or—I have to mention it—the
Calcutta Cup? None of them is funded by the gambling industry,
yet they survive.
Mr Robertson
They are very different. Someone with more experience may correct
me, but I think I am right in saying that across the world,
horseracing is funded by gambling companies. I am not fully aware
of how other sports are funded, so I will have to ask the hon.
Gentleman to excuse me in that respect. I have always been in
favour of racing expanding its income stream and getting more
sponsorship. It does a lot of work on that, and I would be happy
to see it going down that path, but it is nowhere near it yet—not
by any means.
There is also the philosophical aspect to this, as we have heard.
A Conservative Government should not be telling people how much
money they should spend. I am keen to recognise that we need to
help problem gamblers, but we should be targeting people who may
be liable to become addicted to gambling, rather than people who
spend too much on gambling. If we try to stop people who spend
too much on gambling, we enter the philosophy of it. What about
people who spend too much on alcohol? What about people who get
addicted to shopping? It was said earlier that we do not see the
health service dealing with those people, but perhaps it should,
rather than just focusing on one aspect of society —in other
words, gambling. Perhaps that is a criticism of the health
service, because that is not something to be proud of. We should
be looking at people who have other addictions. People with
addictions often have other problems as well, and I speak with
some knowledge on the matter. Saying, “You can spend £100 a
month, but not £200 a month” does not help people with
addictions. We should be creating systems that help those who are
in real danger.
I am not going to speak for very long, and I will respect your
10-minute guidance, Sir Edward. I suggest that we should halt
this process. My hon. Friend the Member for Shipley () suggested that the
Government have invested too much capital in it. Well, they have
not invested as much capital as they did in High Speed 2, and
they managed to pull that—eventually, but quite rightly. I
suggest that we should take a step back, because we risk
destroying not only the betting industry, but, far more
importantly from my point of view, the second most popular sport
in the United Kingdom.
Mr (Old Bexley and Sidcup)
(Con)
My hon. Friend is making a fantastic speech. I am one of the few
Members in the Chamber who does not have a horse track in their
constituency, but my constituents are passionate about this
issue. Like me, they believe in personal responsibility and
freedom, and they like a day at the races. We should not
apologise for those things. As my hon. Friend represents
Cheltenham, does he agree that the checks, as they are designed
and as they are being used voluntarily, are deeply flawed and
that they could see people forced into the black market on the
first day of weeks like Cheltenham if they have had a bad day’s
betting?
Mr Robertson
My hon. Friend is absolutely right that the black market is a
real threat. The tobacco industry may have made a lot of it, but
it was because people were turning to the black market. That
cannot be denied. A committee I chaired years ago looked into
that in some detail. Of course, people did go to the black
market, and they are likely to go to the black market because
they want to have a frictionless bet that does not cause them a
load of trouble. They are already doing it, and we are getting
evidence of that regularly.
As ever, my hon. Friend speaks up very well for the racing
industry. Was he, like me, surprised to hear the SNP appear to
argue that it does not want any income for racecourses from the
gambling industry? Does he agree that people at Perth,
Musselburgh, Hamilton, Ayr and Kelso will be very interested to
hear that that seems to be the view of the SNP?
Mr Robertson
My hon. Friend tempts me to go down a road that I am not quite
sure I want to go down. The SNP is capable of speaking for
itself.
I was not saying that it should be stopped; I was saying that
there has to be equitable funding for all other sports. It cannot
focus just on horseracing as the only one to benefit. There are
other sports enjoyed throughout the United Kingdom.
Mr Robertson
Okay. I think I answered that earlier.
Look, we all want to protect vulnerable people. The analogy I
always use is that a pub makes its money from selling alcoholic
drinks to people, but it does not want alcoholics or people who
are drunk in there. It wants people who enjoy a drink without
causing any problems to themselves or anybody else. The proposals
are deeply unpopular in the racing and betting industries, and
many colleagues in my party and other parties are concerned about
them. We are not saying, “Let’s not take measures to help
vulnerable people.” Of course we should, but this is not the way
to do it.
I ask the Minister to have a word with the Gambling Commission
and put a halt to the pressure it appears to be putting on
companies, which are already taking steps, and we are already
seeing the loss of income to horseracing. The Minister should
say, “Hold it for a minute”—or perhaps, “Hold your horses”—“and
let’s have a rethink.” Let us get interested parties around the
table—I think that suggestion was made earlier. Let us not rush
this; let us think about how we do it properly. As I say, the
Minister is not to blame; he has had this dumped on him, but I
ask him to please go back to the people who are pressing this
policy, wherever in the Conservative party they are, and say,
“This is a dangerous policy. It will not work. There is a lot of
opposition within our own party to it.” Let us get people who
know what they are talking about around a table, talk about it
and see what progress we can make working together.
5.55pm
(St Helens North) (Ind)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Edward. I
was worried that I was going to be declared a non-runner, but I
am glad to get under starter’s orders, having listened to
numerous colleagues.
Let me say at the outset that those of us with an interest in
this topic, from whatever perspective—and, indeed, those of us
with a wider interest in sport—are very fortunate that we have,
in the Minister and the shadow Minister, two people who are
engaged, open to discussion and involved in every aspect of their
brief. In fact, I saw the Minister yesterday, and I thought to
myself, “He is the great white hope for the Conservative party.”
He appeared on our television screens and received rapturous
applause, foot-stomping and acclamation on Merseyside. I am sure
that it was coincidental that it was when he was at Wembley as a
member of the presentation party presenting Jürgen Klopp and
Virgil van Dijk with the league cup.
[Sir in the Chair]
I draw attention to my declaration in the Register of Members’
Financial Interests. I always say at this point that, having
owned horses and gambled on horses, I have given a lot more to
racing and betting than it will ever give me, but I am happy to
draw—
The hon. Gentleman reminds me to draw the House’s attention to my
entry in the register. I am lucky to have been strongly supported
by those in Newmarket.
I am delighted to have given the right hon. Gentleman that
opportunity.
I want to be emphatic about this so that we are very clear: I am
here to speak on behalf of Haydock Park racecourse in my
constituency in St Helens; I am here to speak up for the 100,000
people who signed this petition—decent, honourable, good
taxpayers in this country who have a concern about this issue and
a love for horseracing; and I am here to say emphatically that
the whole of the horseracing industry, which, if I might cheekily
say so, is not widely known for its unanimity on issues, speaks
with one voice about its concerns on this issue. I am co-chair of
the all-party parliamentary group with the hon. Member for
Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson), and this is an interest and an issue
that unites people in all parties and across the House.
I want to step back a little and look at the bigger issues. Many
of the points that I wish to make have been made already. I
furiously agree with the hon. Member for Shipley () on this—as I do, I fear, on
too many issues—and he made a lot of the points that I wish to
make.
That admission is far more damaging to the hon. Gentleman’s
reputation than it is to mine.
Indeed, I fear it was mutually assured destruction.
I want to say three things. First, this is bad policy, in terms
of the concept and the philosophy behind it, its purpose, and
indeed its efficacy in addressing that purported purpose.
Secondly, it will have a detrimental, disproportionate and,
frankly, existential impact on British horseracing. Thirdly, I
will address what the Government, racing and betting can do to
try to fix the situation, work together and address their
respective challenges.
Having praised the Minister, I do not wish to bury him, but this
is not racing’s fault, it is not betting’s fault, and it is not
even the Gambling Commission’s fault. They have not led us to
this situation; it is the Government that have led us to this
situation. It is bad policy by any objective measure—and it is
hard to find any objective measure, because it is not evidence
based. It is incoherent, and on many levels it is a response to
anecdote and emotion. I find it incredible that I say this as an
old-fashioned, working-class Labour man, but this is massive
Government overreach and an infringement on the right of the
individual. On no other legal leisure activity in the UK have the
Government set out spending limits in this fashion.
Net loss is a terrible barometer. It takes no account of the
hugely different ranges of disposable income that individuals
have. The floated £500 trigger per 365 rolling days a year is
equivalent to £1.37 a day. I think the hon. Member for Burton
(Kate Kniveton) mentioned that figure earlier. That is the
equivalent of doing the English lotto, the Euromillions and a
scratchcard a week. If the purpose is to tackle problem gambling,
it is an odd solution. Tools that already exist, such as
self-exclusion and deposit limits, are more effective. If
necessary, a conversation can take place with betting about how
those measures can be strengthened. I speak with experience of
friends and family whose lives have been devastated by addiction,
but ultimately it is about the individual and their behaviour,
and it is about responsibility. If you want to gamble, you will
find a way to gamble.
The point about the black market is, I respectfully say, an
important one. If someone wants to gamble a lot, they will be
able to gamble a lot. We are not talking about the old fella in
the pub who takes a friendly bet on a Saturday; this is about
organised crime and national security. It is about the use of
technology through drones flying over our racecourses,
manipulation of data and all those things that the sport has to
work 24 hours a day, seven days a week to stop becoming out of
control. We are warning about this issue. The front page of the
Racing Post today made the potential consequences very clear. We
are talking about a scale of thousands of people and millions of
pounds.
That leads me to the point about racing having a specific
problem. We do not have to imagine the impact of the policy,
because de facto checks are having an impact now. Racing has a
specific problem because of the unique, inextricable relationship
that we have with betting through the levy, and it is creating a
funding crisis for our sport. Like all sports, racing is facing
difficult economic headwinds, but the decision to hurt betting
revenue, as set out in black and white in the Government’s White
Paper, was certainly careless, if not deliberate. The £900
million reduction in horseracing betting revenue will mean a
direct hit of £50 million to racing. That is the genesis of the
problem.
The right hon. Member for Chingford and Woodford Green ( ), who is no longer in his
place, pleaded in aid of the rail men—the course bookies. I have
been a great defender of theirs, along with so many others. There
is nothing better than being on a racecourse, having a bet in the
ring, looking at the various odds and enjoying the fun spectacle.
We do not have the tic-tac any more, but we certainly enjoy the
theatre of on-course betting. It generated £120 million in
turnover last year, and off-course betting generated £3 billion
in revenue. We are talking about a £5 billion industry. If we are
going to come to a debate like this and propose solutions, they
have to be serious ones based on numbers and figures.
The reduction in the levy that will result from less betting on
racing, and the resultant loss in the value of media rights, will
have a consequential impact on prize money. Racecourses face a
very difficult environment already, and participants, owners and
trainers feel frustrated about the level of prize money. It risks
the sustainability of our courses and racing yards. That will
mean closures and job losses, and will very quickly put racing in
a death spiral. We have already seen the impact on punters; I can
attest to that. Racing has become a less attractive product.
Bookies have removed best odds guaranteed and people can hardly
get a bet on. Racing is part of a delicate ecosystem. We are not
quite an endangered species, but this measure puts a motorway
through our habitat.
It is funny how sometimes I hear, when I take part in these
debates, that somehow one has a pro-bookie approach or is in the
pocket of the gambling industry. The shadow Minister, my hon.
Friend the Member for Barnsley East (), represents a proud
working-class constituency like mine. She is from the same bit of
the Labour party as me—the sensible bit of it that is rooted in
communities. My relationship with the bookies is adversarial. I
want to beat the bookies—that is the whole point of gambling. I
want to take money from them. As the hon. Member for Shipley
says, I sometimes rail against the bookies, but that does not
mean that I do not understand the vital contribution that they
make to horseracing.
What is it that the Government, racing and gambling can do
together? The Government should bin this idea, preferably
permanently but certainly until the promised frictionless element
is proven to be just that. Generally, the Government should
ensure that racing and betting are well run, well regulated and
fair, and that they continue providing jobs and contributing to
the economy. On racing specifically, they should recognise its
huge impact in communities and the wonderful enhancement that it
is to the UK, at home and abroad. Other than that, they should
butt out. The Minister should enjoy the odd day at the racing,
but other than that, the Government should let the two industries
get on with it.
I have heard some of the contributions and, well intentioned and
from people with a genuine love of horseracing though they are,
they need to be challenged. Racing and betting have to work
together. They have on this issue, and they need to do so on
others. Racing needs to recognise that it receives more now from
betting than ever before through the levy, media rights,
sponsorship and advertising.
I will add a note of caution. Seeking more from levy reform when
turnover on betting on racing is reducing, even if one were to
incorporate international racing, is arguably a short-term fix
that is not sustainable in the long term. We do not want to be
penny wise and pound foolish, taking money in the front door but
losing it out the back. For its part, betting needs to continue
to enhance and help promote racing. It needs to recognise and
support the sport’s unique position and the skill, talent and
people that make it a special and precious product. It needs to
give the punter a fair price, give us a chance to beat them now
and then, and pay us out when we do.
We talk a lot about the provider in terms of the bookies and
about the recipient in terms of horseracing, but what about the
benefactor? That is the punter—the men and women I consider
myself very much a part of and a spokesperson for. Racing should
never be afraid to say that gambling is a huge and enjoyable part
of our sport. People like me love the mechanics of it, the
breeding, the form, the going, the word that we get from Ireland
on a big day, but others come for the name, the colours, the
numbers, so we need to be careful about putting forward the
argument about chance as well.
There is a reason we are the second biggest spectator sport. We
need to be confident and clear about that. We need to be
strategic and sensible. In this House, like in the country as a
whole, we need to win friends and fans and exert influence. I do
not think that is beyond us. As you know, Sir George, racing is
simultaneously the sport of kings and the pursuit of the masses.
Who else can claim that?
6.08pm
(Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale
and Tweeddale) (Con)
It is a great pleasure to follow the hon. Member for St Helens
North (), who is a much greater
expert on this issue than I am. I make no apology for speaking up
for horseracing and the equestrian industry more generally in
this debate, because it is extremely important to the local
economy in constituencies such as mine. I represent the largest
rural constituency in the United Kingdom outside the highlands.
It does not have a functioning racecourse, but it does border
courses in Hexham, Carlisle, Hamilton, Kelso and Ayr. It
therefore has many training yards, breeders, vets, farriers and
jockeys—all the people connected with an equestrian sport.
Those people are extremely concerned about this proposal and the
impact it will have on the industry. This debate is an
opportunity to air those concerns. Like those fellow Members who
have already set out some very important points, I think that is
what we should be doing this evening.
The first of the two points that I want to focus on is the
inappropriateness of any one-size-fits-all approach. I think
there is a consensus, or at least a consensus is emerging, that
the approach towards games of chance should be different from the
approach towards games of skill. It is not appropriate to treat
them the same. Going to a racecourse is not the same as playing a
game of roulette on a phone. My second point is about the reality
of frictionless checks and how possible they actually are.
It has already been said how helpful the Minister has been in
meeting MPs with concerns. I have already drawn the Minister’s
attention to a book—indeed, volume one of a series of
books—written by my constituent called “Strongholds of
Satan”. It is from a series that sets out to detail every
racecourse that has previously existed in the UK. The title,
“Strongholds of Satan”, comes from how racecourses were
previously described; before the rise of football, racing was a
potent combination of national sport, fair, local holiday and
gambling opportunity. Therefore, religious leaders were outraged
and politicians were constantly trying to restrain all the
shenanigans among the crowds, the gamblers and the
horse-owners.
I particularly commended the Minister to the chapter that is
called “The regulation of racing”. In that chapter, Mr Morgan
sets out how, from 1654, Government have sought to regulate and
interfere with racing. In fact, the first act by the Cromwellian
Government was to ban racing completely, not because they had any
moral concern or other concern, but because they did not want
crowds of people to be brought together who could foment against
the Government. The book goes on to describe other pieces of
legislation. For example, in 1740, there was:
“An Act to restrain and prevent the excessive Increase of
Horse-races; and…more effectual preventing of excessive and
deceitful Gaming”.
And so it goes on, through the next three centuries.
I will not set it out in full, but that chapter shows that many
of the measures that were introduced had completely unintended
consequences. What happened, as we have speculated on already in
this debate, is that the owners, the punters, the racecourse
proprietors and the nefarious elements changed their practices to
accommodate legislative proposals. That is a significant concern
about what is being proposed now. The right hon. Member for West
Suffolk (), the former Culture
Secretary, set out the concerns about illegal betting—black
market betting—taking place. We should consider very clearly the
possibility of such unintended consequences and in particular, as
the British Horseracing Association has set out, the
proportionality of what is being proposed.
It is also clear that many people, including the many
constituents who have been in touch with me, do not have
confidence in the concept of the frictionless check. I would be
grateful if the Minister set out in closing how people can have
confidence that these checks will not intrude into their
affairs.
Mr French
One of the potential consequences of this is the impact on the
elderly and on isolation in particular. When I was a student, I
worked part-time for a bookmaker to help to pay for my fees and
upkeep. It helped me to fall in love with horseracing. One of the
things that I used to see day in, day out was elderly people who
would bet very small stakes, who would very much fear the
intrusiveness of the checks and of being caught up in the trap.
That might fuel some kind of isolation in their day-to-day
experiences.
I very much take that on board. To quote my constituent Alexander
McLean:
“I bet on sport and I find it extremely offensive that someone
should dictate how I should spend the money that I have already
paid tax on. I am 71 years old. I have no dependants. My bills
have been paid. I have enough money stashed away to pay for my
funeral. Why are the Government subjecting me to this?”
He goes on to say that he agrees, of course, that there are
people who find themselves in “tragic” situations with a gambling
addiction, but as the hon. Member for Bath () also said, this is using
“a sledgehammer to crack a nut”.
I am sure that Mr McLean will have been pleased to hear my hon.
Friend the Member for Shipley () speak up for punters and my
hon. Friend the Member for Old Bexley and Sidcup (Mr French)
speak up in particular for older punters who take a responsible
attitude.
That does not mean that the issues and concerns expressed so
eloquently by the hon. Member for Swansea East () and my right hon. Friend
the Member for Chingford and Woodford Green ( ) should not be
considered. Of course they should be, but clearly for the whole
horseracing industry and the equestrian community the Government
have got it wrong. They need to take a step back and review how
they can continue to support the industry and the sector
effectively, while at the same time taking on board the serious
concerns about the regulation and operation of certain games of
chance. That is my message to the Government.
Many people may think that this estate is a stronghold of Satan,
but many people here clearly have genuine concern and support for
the industry. They know how important it is to their local
economies and communities. We should do everything to support it,
not bring in measures that potentially completely and utterly
undermine it.
6.18pm
(East Lothian) (Alba)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
George.
As is clear from the speeches that have been made so far, there
are two aspects to this debate: the question of the regulation of
gambling, and the question of the protection of horseracing. The
first, I think, requires action, because there is a significant
social problem, which is a point that I will come on to and that
others, especially the hon. Member for Neath (), made so eloquently.
The second question is that of a debate between the gambling
industry and horseracing. We have to differentiate there. After
all, the gambling industry, or much of it, is now online, and
much of it is now based in Gibraltar, so it is not even paying
taxes, whereas the horseracing industry is indigenous, although
it is also partly—this inference was made about
horseracing—funded by the gambling industry. Yes, that is to some
extent a historical anachronism, but it was no doubt done
deliberately so that people would not see gambling going to the
black market, with other unregulated aspects, whether that was
pitch and toss, dogfights or illegal boxing matches. That ensured
that a revenue stream went from gambling into horseracing, and
that is fundamental.
As the hon. Member for Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson) said correctly,
people might think that horseracing is flush. It is not. I, along
with others, declare an interest in having horseracing within my
constituency, because I represent Musselburgh. Musselburgh has
had its challenges, Musselburgh had to be sold and has now been
bought by Chester.
At one stage, it even looked like there might not be a buyer,
because it is not as if people are lining up as they are for
English Premier League—or even Scottish Premiership—football
teams. There were redundancies there—I had to intervene and speak
to the management about them—but they were done reluctantly, and
we have had to accord to that. There are challenges in that
sector. Some of this—this is the subliminal aspect—is about the
gambling industry reducing the amount of money that it puts into
horseracing, because it does not have the same involvement in
funding football or anything else, other than the money that it
makes from it.
Returning to the primary issue, there is a problem with gambling.
We must recognise that people suffer. I am not some libertarian
who thinks it is all just free market, with people deciding
according to their free will. It is a social problem, exactly the
same as alcohol and drugs. We do not un-regulate them and say,
“Consume what you like.” We ensure that we know what the product
is, and supervise, tax and regulate it. We can argue—I certainly
do—that we sometimes go too far on drugs and not far enough on
alcohol, but we must ensure that we regulate.
We must recognise that gambling has transformed. I am a child of
the ’60s, when gambling was basically done in a bookies. They
were foreboding and intimidating places where working men—perhaps
in a flat cap—went, where women would not be seen, and that
respectable men would probably not wish to be seen going into.
They kept very limited hours. When I was young, they always
seemed quite intimidatory. I now have a flat in Dunbar, and I can
look across the high street and see a bookies. It is open early
in the morning until late at night. People of all ages, genders,
ethnicities go in—far too many, I must say, much as I am not
opposed to people enjoying a flutter.
The whole nature of the industry has changed. As Justice
Secretary in Scotland, I remember being briefed by Dr Reith from
Glasgow, a world expert in gambling and how gambling has changed.
People can now literally lose not just their shirt, but their
house overnight if they have multiple credit cards, so there must
be regulation. The nature of who gambles has also changed,
because ethnic minorities who might not have gone into the
working-class, working man’s bookies are now going elsewhere. I
remember hearing that in Scotland we had significant difficulties
with Polish people and eastern Europeans who were working in the
casinos. They socialised in the casinos and therefore developed a
gambling problem, because that was where they hung about. Since
women and other people who would not have otherwise have gone
into a bookies are doing so, we must target and address gambling.
We must address the demand, which is why we must look at
regulating the sponsorship of football teams and some of the
television advertisements that are basically pushed in our
faces—we want to watch the football but are inconvenienced by
being told to to cash in by betting on the number of corners, and
all these things.
That is entirely separate from horseracing. Yes, gambling is an
inextricable part of horseracing. If people go to a horserace,
they wish to gamble. Some will probably gamble too much and
regret it, but most will not. It is a day out in Musselburgh,
much as it is in other constituencies. It is an event for people;
the ladies day at all racecourses is very colourful, with all
hats, dresses and whatever else. People come from far and wide,
and it is part of the local economy. I said there had been
redundancies, but it still provides employment there and for the
hotels, guesthouses and hostelries on race days. People make
money, and there is a supply chain of those who provide for the
horseracing industry. If we cripple it, we face not only the risk
that the likes of Musselburgh will close, but the risk that
people will continue to watch and bet on races, albeit those in
Ireland, France, Hong Kong or wherever else, as I think the hon.
Member for Tewkesbury said. That is why we must protect it and
get the balance right.
As Justice Secretary in Scotland, I remember bringing in quite
firm legislation on the sale of alcohol. I think it was correctly
done. Equally, I remember being criticised at some stage because
I gave the licence back to Murrayfield stadium. People asked,
“How can you be cracking down on alcohol and yet allow an alcohol
licence in Murrayfield?” I answered that we are not against
alcohol, in exactly the same way that we are not against
gambling; we are about ensuring that it is carried out in a safe
and secure manner, that it is regulated, and that people can be
protected—sometimes even from themselves. That is why I believe
action has to be taken on these social problems. We are our
brother’s and our sister’s keeper.
The result on Saturday may not have gone the way most Members
here, other than the two of us from Scotland, wanted, but the
match will have been enjoyed. It was better that people went to
the stadium and had a few drinks consumed safely and under
supervision, rather than sitting in a park drinking cans or
bottles and then rushing to the game late. That is why, in
alcohol legislation in Scotland, when I was Justice Secretary we
were always very supportive of the on-trade. We much preferred
people to go to a public house where the alcohol industry wants
to sell a premium product—at a premium price for them—in a manner
that is safe and secure and from which they can benefit. That is
much better than people being sold almost unlimited supplies of
high-strength, low-price alcohol from supermarkets or
elsewhere.
There are corollaries with gambling. What we have to do is stop
people losing their shirt, never mind their home, through games
of chance or puggy machines—or whatever sophisticated name they
have now—sitting in betting shops. People can go online and, as I
said, get a credit card and literally see their savings
disappear. What we cannot do is undermine where people can go and
have a flutter and enjoy themselves as part of a day out.
The hon. Gentleman is making a very interesting speech. May I
refer him to the comments made by the hon. Member for St Helens
North ()? He made it clear that
without the levy income that horseracing generates from online
betting, Musselburgh and other racecourses would not exist for
having a nice day out and a bet at the ring. The income the
horseracing industry gets from online gambling is absolutely
critical for horseracing to continue in this country.
I said at the outset that I am conscious that Musselburgh and
other racecourses have to get income from the gambling industry.
If people now gamble more online as opposed to going to the
betting shop, even the one opposite me in Dunbar, that has to be
accepted. We have to separate the gambling that is being sold in
every shape or form, as it is, and entertainment, because that is
what horseracing is. Gambling is a legitimate part of it and
sustains it. Obviously, the industry seeks to make more money out
of encouraging people to bet and gamble on football; it does not
put the same money in, except in terms of shirt advertising or
whatever else, and it does not benefit the grassroots game or any
club. The Government have to make sure they take the necessary
action against gambling, not those who are at the turf in such
places.
I fully accept the point made by the hon. Member for Shipley that
people now place bets not by going into a betting shop, but on
their phone—not even on their computer. However, we should
provide protection for what is an industry. It may be an
anachronism; one could argue that other sports should get the
benefit, but we are where we are, and we have to recognise that
as a society. On that basis, we have to differentiate
horseracing, which needs to be protected and which we want to
encourage people to participate in because their gambling will be
supervised, moderated and part of a culture, and other
gambling—as I said, it is like drinking in a pub as opposed to
drinking in a public park.
6.29pm
(Waveney) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Sir George.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Neath () on leading this debate.
She and I usually have discussions about squash, but I am here to
talk about another of my hobbies: horseracing. I have a lifelong
interest in and passion for racing. In the past, I have owned
legs and hairs of racehorses—not very successfully. At the moment
on the farm at home we have a brood mare and we have youngstock,
and my ambition—as crazy as it may sound—is to get those horses
on to the racecourse. At the moment, the greater problem than
affordability checks is dealing with mud fever, but affordability
checks are very important. Like everyone else, I know that
problem gambling is a major problem, but there is concern that
there will be a severe unintended impact on the funding of
horseracing if the affordability checks go forward in their
existing form.
Horseracing is largely funded through the levy. In recent years
additional funding has come in through media rights and
sponsorship, but largely it comes from the horserace betting
levy, which came in in the early 1960s. I personally think that
the Government went down the wrong road with horseracing. It
would have been better if we had what is known as a parimutuel
form of gambling. As we heard from my hon. Friend the Member for
Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson), that is why the prize money is so much
higher in places like Hong Kong and Japan, which have incredibly
well-regulated industries too.
Horseracing depends to a dramatic extent on the levy. It is quite
clear from what I see and the feedback I get that the
affordability checks in their current form will have a serious
impact on the takings from the levy. Looking at the prize money,
horseracing and its funding is facing a real crisis in the UK. My
hon. Friend the Member for Shipley () said that we have the best
horseracing in the world, and we do, but that is increasing in
risk and becoming an anachronism. There is a real worry that if
we let this go on horseracing, will wither on the vine in this
country.
Look at the horses in training sales from Tattersalls at
Newmarket last autumn. A lot of those horses would have
traditionally come out of flat racing, gone into national hunt
racing and remained in the UK for racing. They are now going all
around the world, to the US or Australia, and there are emerging
new industries—in Dubai with the Meydan, and in places such as
Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, which are making a real impact. A lot
of horses are going to those places and a lot of British owners
are racing out there. Members may have watched the racing on
Saturday afternoon. The very well-known racing figure Sir Alex
Ferguson—where was he? He was at Meydan, not watching his horses
run at Kempton. I am worried that that is where we may be
heading.
We have heard great stories today; everyone has plugged the
racecourses we have all around the UK, and we have heard how
important they are for their local economies. That is very true,
but there is one point I would highlight, which I picked up in
the Racing Post over the weekend. An article said that the Grand
National meeting every year puts more money into the Liverpool
economy than the Eurovision song contest did last year. We see
that repeated at Cheltenham, York and Goodwood and at the
festivals that take place all around the country. That is at
risk.
The racing supply chain extends far beyond that. It extends into
the training centres and into the countryside and on to the
studs. There are places where horses are pre-trained, and,
importantly, there are places where horses are retrained. When
horses have finished their racing lives, they are retrained for
alternative uses and activities. The tentacles of racing extend a
long way, not just into the countryside but into the towns and
the licensed betting offices on the high street. I know that the
hon. Member for Swansea East () has a concern about those,
but certainly in the town that I represent, there has not been a
dramatic increase in LBOs. They are a very important part—
No, I do not.
If I have misinterpreted the hon. Lady, I apologise profusely.
LBOs are very important on the high streets. They also tend to
have a family feel about them in that the staff, many of whom now
are women, have a good family relationship with the punters. If
people start getting out of control, they very quickly say, “Hang
on, do you know where you are going on that?” There is a long
supply chain.
We have also heard about unintrusive and frictionless checks. The
feedback that I get is that they are very difficult to put into
practice. We will either see the rise of the black market—the
large article on the front of the Racing Post indicates that that
is a reality—or a lot of small punters will say, “Well, I give
up. I’m not going to do it.” That then impacts on the levy and it
spirals down to the impact on racing.
Finally, there is an element of hypocrisy about this in that the
lottery is not included. The lottery is great and it is probably
one of the best legacies of the Major Government. Its impact has
been profound and positive. When I was growing up, very rarely
did we win Olympic gold medals. I remember listening to David
Hemery when he won in 1968 in Mexico. We now win in so many
different sports, and that is the direct result of the lottery.
The lottery is a great thing, but it is a game of chance rather
than a game of skill. It is random betting and it can take over
people’s lives. I remember one statistic put to me that if I
gambled on the national lottery every year since Moses was pulled
out of the bulrushes, I still would not have won. We need to look
at all forms of gambling and betting together.
In conclusion, I was reading the Racing Post a few months ago.
One of its leading journalists, Chris Cook, son of the former
Labour Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, made a comment that left me
thinking. He said that you would not have expected a Conservative
Government to do this to horseracing. I agree with him. On that
point, I urge the Minister, who is listening very intently to the
great speeches that we have had—
I have followed the whole of the debate, and I want to say
quickly that this is not a party political issue. It is an issue
for all those who feel that horseracing gives us so much across
all communities. I sincerely hope that the Minister believes it
is a cross-party issue that we all must address.
The hon. Lady is right that it is not party political, but it is
a point that Chris Cook made. If we look back, we all remember
seeing Robin Cook at the racecourse in his Barbour jacket, down
by the final fence. is actually a great punter as
well. It is not party political but at the moment, we have a
Conservative Government, so I urge the Minister to take on board
what he is hearing this afternoon.
6.40pm
(Mid Norfolk) (Con)
They say that all good things come to those who wait, so I hope
the Minister will listen to my words and then reassure me that I
have not waited in vain. I am grateful for the chance to speak in
this debate. When more than 40 or 50 colleagues turn up to
Westminster Hall—for those listening, and who are not aware—we
clearly have a problem. Actually, I suggest we have two problems
that the Minister present has the great honour of helping us to
deal with.
The first is the very serious problem of the increasing number of
people in this country who find themselves in the turmoil of
addictive online gambling. That is a real problem. The second is
the fragility of the finances of racing, a sport that we all
love. We need to be clear about those two problems and not to
conflate them too much, as has been done, and to work out how to
deal with them both, because both problems are real.
I have no particular interest in racing, other than a long family
history and connection. I have been to the races many times, both
before my time here and as a Member of Parliament, and
occasionally as a guest of the BHA, which supported the work I
did to create the Bridge of Hope charity. I was, with pride,
closely involved with the 2013 Offshore Gambling Bill, promoted
by my right hon. Friend the Member for West Suffolk (), who represents Newmarket, to
bring offshore betting within the purview of the levy to give
racing a serious boost. I do not have a racetrack in my
constituency yet; I have waited for the Boundary Commission to
put Fakenham in my patch for many years, but it has refused to do
so. I enjoy the little tracks as much as the big—a point that my
hon. Friend the Member for Waveney () has just made. It is a great
pleasure to follow him. My brother trains in California, and I
have spent many hours as an underpaid hot walker, walking his
hots around the track in both California and, in rather cooler
weather, at Woodbine in the winter. I am a happy and assiduous
attendee at Fakenham races, one of the country’s great regional
tracks
I think the House will be aware that I really stand this
afternoon because of my own family experience. My father was a
jump jockey who rode through the ’40s and ’50s. He rode for Sir
Peter Cazalet and rode Her late Majesty the Queen Mother’s
horses. In 1958, he won the grand national on Mr What and the
King George on Lochroe. With my mother, he bred Specify, who went
on to win the national in ’71. However, my father’s is a tragic
story. After many head injuries, head injury-induced depression
and psychosis, alcohol addiction, gambling and bankruptcy, his
life—indeed, that of my family—collapsed in 1967. It is a
familiar tale for many sporting heroes, but a story that, thanks
to the great work of the racing industry, we do not see any more
because we are better at looking after jockeys and better at
detecting head injuries.
It is in that context that I want to make clear that I rise today
because I take the unintended consequences very seriously—the
damage of great sport when not properly regulated, and the damage
of gambling and bankruptcy. I am not at all relaxed about those
dangers. I hope it is, therefore, all the more powerful when I
join colleagues who have spoken today in saying how seriously I
worry that this well-intended measure, designed to tackle the
curse of online gambling, is in danger of not solving that
problem, but exacerbating another: the deeply fragile finances of
a great sport that all Members present, across all parties, have
expressed our love for.
I am fearful that we are in danger of making a mistake that, in
15 years in Parliament and 30 years of watching, I have seen all
too often, which is the mistake of do-somethingery: “Something
must be done. This is something—let’s do it.” It is using a
sledgehammer to crack a nut, with the law of unintended
consequences, punishing the innocent and doing very little to
tackle the real problem, and seriously damaging the financial
resilience of this great industry. I think it would be a huge
mistake, and a great shame on us as a generation and on the
Government who allowed it to happen. In that spirit, I am here to
try to give the Minister some helpful tips on how we might find
the right way through this.
I thank the petitioners who brought us here today, as well as the
Racing Post and the British Horseracing Authority, which have
done such good work to raise the issues. I will highlight three
important pieces of data shared in the British Horseracing
Authority brief. The first relates to the impact of these
measures. More than 15,000 horserace bettors took part in the
Right to Bet survey in the autumn. Of those, more than half said
they will stop betting, or bet less, if new checks are
introduced, while one in 10 bettors is already using a black
market bookmaker. Some 40% are prepared to use the black market
if clunky enforcement affordability checks are implemented, 90%
oppose postcodes or job titles being used to determine their
ability to bet, and 26% have already experienced an affordability
check ahead of the passing of any legislation.
Secondly, the briefing makes clear the full impact of these
reforms if introduced as they stand. There will potentially be a
£50 million cost to this industry, which, as my hon. Friend the
Member for Waveney has just made clear, is already struggling.
That is not something that we should accept lightly.
Thirdly, the briefing points out that a £500 a year upper
threshold for frictionless checks works out at a net spend of
just £1.37 a day. Are we seriously intending to damage the
viability of this great sport and this great industry in order to
look busy in monitoring a £1.37 risk? This is a disproportionate
measure and I fear that it will have major unintended
consequences.
I will not repeat or rehearse the arguments that have been made
very eloquently by many colleagues. I will just highlight the
fact that there are many who are not able to speak here today,
including many peers in the upper House, whom I will not name but
who have taken a very strong interest in the issue, and my right
hon. Friends the Members for Stratford-on-Avon () and for Witham (), and my hon. Friend the Member
for Hexham (), who is a Minister. He is also a distinguished
amateur jockey who would have spoken today had he been allowed to
do so. Many people from across the House have not been able to
speak in this debate but would have done so very forcefully.
I will make one or two points that perhaps have not been made as
fully as they might have been. First, as has been said, racing is
a vital mainstay of the decentralised rural economy all round
this country, and it is absolutely key to the levelling-up
mission that the Government have set out. Yes, it is the sport of
kings, as others have said, but it is also the sport of stable
lads and ladesses, and the sport of small businesses all around
the country. It is the sport that provides the pyramid at the
bottom of which are the point to point races, the pony clubs and
all the grassroots equestrian activity that we love and rely
on.
From Yarmouth to Chepstow, from Wincanton to Kelso and from
Cartmel to Catterick, many tracks are integral to their local
economy. Horseracing touches on and is instrumental in 60
marginal seats, which is not a small number in an election year,
creates 80,000 jobs directly and 100,000 indirectly, and 8,000
small and medium-sized enterprises are involved with it. This is
not a fringe activity; it is a very key activity at the heart of
our decentralised economy.
I will just make another point. An earlier speaker suggested that
we do not need betting to support the boat race or one-off
events. Horses are not machines and we cannot have an industry
based on one race a year. The reason we can have the Derby is
that we have all the other races that build up to it, and it is
the same with the grand national. Those two races are the
pinnacles of great pyramids of activity that start at small,
windy tracks all around the country. Also, horses cannot just be
parked for 364 days a year and then asked to run; the training
and the conditioning of horses requires activity all through the
year.
Throughout this debate, we have not really mentioned these
beautiful creatures, the joy we get from watching them race, or
all those people who work with, train and look after them. That
is really important to all of us who have spoken today.
I am grateful to the hon. Lady, who makes a good point. They are
beautiful and what a joy it is to watch them exercising, whether
in Malton in Yorkshire or wherever else around the country. The
sight of horses exercising in preparation for racing is part of
the rural economy.
Secondly, I want to make the point that horseracing, as an
activity and an industry, is a jewel in the crown of our global
soft power. The truth is that, having grown up in Newmarket as a
child, I have watched as that town and its horseracing have
become very reliant—over-reliant, I would suggest—on a few very
wealthy families. Those families have done an amazing service to
our sport, but we have to make sure that we are not reliant on a
very small number of individuals to maintain the viability of an
entire industry. That point puts this debate in a wider
context.
Crucially, I also want to highlight that there is a very serious
problem in our society of addiction to gambling, particularly
online gambling, and there is a growing body of evidence—I say
this as the former Minister for Life Sciences and as somebody who
has had a career in medical research—that the causes of such
addictive behaviour and cycles of addiction are not simply based
on repeat activity. They are a symptom of much deeper underlying
causes, which are often genetic and nearly always neurological.
There are a whole series of conditions that drive that underlying
cycle of addictive behaviour. It is not that someone has a bet on
a horse, then a second bet and it is entirely addictive. Indeed,
in my own experience, betting on horses is quite the opposite; I
have very seldom made much money doing it and I very seldom carry
on doing it with that in mind. No, that is not what drives the
addictive behaviour; it is underpinning neuroscience and wider
conditions. As a society we really need to take those factors
very seriously.
Is there not the more specific distinction, which the hon.
Gentleman almost drew out, that the placing of a bet and then
waiting many minutes as a minimum for a result is neurologically
distinct from a bet that gives an immediate hit? Where the repeat
bet would be based on the physiological immediacy of the previous
result, horseracing breaks that and therefore has a different
neurological impact in relation to addiction. Would it therefore
not be right in law and in policy to completely separate the
proposals for online games of chance from the wonderful sport of
horseracing? It would be easy to do in law—let’s just split the
two.
The right hon. Gentleman anticipates the logic of the argument I
was building towards—he is exactly right. That is why if we are
seriously thinking of tackling this curse of addictive online
gambling, surely we should be looking at a whole range of other
behaviours and products. The proposal seems to be a
disproportionate way of tackling a real problem, if indeed that
is what it is. Others have mentioned the logical consistency of
extending these checks on alcohol, tobacco, car hire purchases
and—dare I say it—mortgages, and all sorts of things that we
might say people cannot afford. I worry that this could be the
thin end of a very big wedge in which the state decides that it
is its job not to regulate properly, but to start asking whether
people can afford to do something. That is an Orwellian dystopia
that I do not want to live in.
The truth is we have to think properly about the sustainable
resilience of racing. I absolutely echo the comments of my hon.
Friend the Member for Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson): prize money is
falling fast, costs have risen fast and are stubbornly high, and
competition is eating our lunch. If we look to Irish and French
racing, we see that we are haemorrhaging from a serious industry.
This proposal would not make a small reform to a healthy
industry—the industry is struggling and it needs our help, but I
am worried that the law of unintended consequences will make the
situation worse.
I want to make a point about technology. It has often been
asserted that we do not have the technology to do these checks
properly. That is right at the moment, but would it not be an
amazing thing if we decided to use technology properly—we are
already an AI powerhouse—to start to analyse addictive behaviour
and look at the trades on digital betting that indicate such
behaviour? Over 70 markers of harmful gambling have been
identified in studies, 16 of which really drive this activity. I
suggest there might be an opportunity for us to use technology
better to tackle those behaviours online that drive the problem
we are trying to solve.
I echo the comments of the right hon. Member for West Suffolk on
track racing, which I would go so far as to say is one of the
best ways to introduce people to responsible gambling. I remember
taking my two children to the 2000 Guineas and giving them £5
each, and they decided to put it together on an each-way bet. It
was a smart move; they are clever children. Even more clever, my
son decided to take my daughter’s advice, because she knows about
horses, and he looked at the odds, because he knows about
numbers, and they put £5 each way on Galileo Gold, who stormed to
victory. They learned a lot that day about gambling. They saw
people who had drunk too much and who were losing too much. They
didn’t. I took the money and gave it to them. They discovered a
lot, and on-track gambling is a fabulous way of getting people to
realise that most of the decisions we take in life are a gamble
one way or another, and it is how we deal with them that really
matters.
I am not here in any way for the health of the gambling industry.
I am interested in the health of UK racing and the real
identification of the at-risk addiction that we see cursing so
much of our society, in particular those games of chance that
have driven such addiction. I simply say to the Minister that I
know he has a difficult job on his hands. I have sat at that
Dispatch Box with a packed Westminster Hall calling for reform.
The Prime Minister, in North Yorkshire, understands the
importance of the industry. The Secretary of State’s constituency
is next to Newmarket—in fact, she has the breeder of Galileo Gold
in her constituency—and understands it. It is not too late to
change tact and come back with a serious package of measures
designed for the twin problems of the sustainability of racing’s
finances and the genuine opportunity for this country to lead in
harnessing technology and smart regulation for the tackling of
gambling addiction. If not, I urge the Minister to look seriously
at the net loss provisions, which are too low. When an industry
warns that something will cost it £50 million, we have a duty to
listen.
6.54pm
(Inverclyde) (SNP)
I thank the hon. Member for Neath () for leading this debate.
Let me say briefly to the right hon. Member for Dumfriesshire,
Clydesdale and Tweeddale () that if horseracing were
even partially responsible for fomenting an uprising against the
UK Government, I would be leading the charge—but it is not. It is
a terrific sport, which people gamble on and enjoy. This petition
is a tiny bit about horseracing and a lot about the black market
and affordability checks, but we have spent nearly two and a half
hours talking about the horseracing industry.
Before anyone puts me down, I am delighted that so many MPs here
today have recognised the fact that online gambling and online
casinos are a dangerous thing and that we have to be on top of
that to help people away from the course of addiction. I have not
seen many of those Members sitting in front of grieving parents
whose child has been driven to complete suicide. I have, however,
seen them on the racecourses. I have seen them back up their
racecourses. It is understandable: if I had a racecourse in my
constituency, I would think that it was a hugely important part
of my constituency that generated money and had an important
supply chain around it.
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
Not right now.
It is hugely important. If we look at the sort of money that the
gambling industry feeds into the industry—
On a point of order, Sir George. The hon. Gentleman has asserted
that Members who spoke in favour of racing or who have
racecourses in their constituency have never sat in front of
grieving parents, do not know anything about addiction and have
never comforted those affected by addiction. The hon. Gentleman
knows nothing about me, and he knows nothing about many other
colleagues who have spoken. I ask him to be very careful about
how he approaches what he says, and to have sensitivity before
making assertions about any Member here or their motivations,
their families or their experience of addiction.
(in the Chair)
That is not a point of order, but the hon. Gentleman has managed
to get it off his chest.
I absolutely take on board what the hon. Gentleman says. I
apologise if I worded that wrongly; I was talking about the
sessions that we had at the APPG for gambling-related harm. I
appreciate that, as was pointed out earlier, many people have
been touched by the curse of gambling addiction.
The point is that it is understandable that so many people have
raced to sign e-petition 649894, which calls on the UK Government
not to implement the proposed financial risk checks for online
gambling. The gambling industry has led and paid for this
lobbying and has been hellbent on spreading disinformation that
is designed to create uncertainty and raise concerns among people
who enjoy the occasional gamble. I understand the punters’ point
of view. They feel the fear behind this, because it is a message
that they have been fed.
The truth about affordability checks is more complicated,
however. I am not a prohibitionist. How many times have I had to
say that? I am not trying to ban gambling, but I do want to
create a safe environment for it. It may come as a surprise that
affordability checks were not the invention of the APPG for
gambling-related harm. This is not some mendacious ploy that the
group is using; the idea was mooted in 2019 by , when I believe he was still the MP for West Bromwich
East. Industry leader Richard Flint, who was at Sky Bet,
supported Mr Watson by saying that too many people were losing
money that they could not afford online. We need to work together
with the industry and the Government to limit that harm.
I think that limits on spend, rather than on stakes, are the
right way to go, and those limits should be based on
affordability. Richard Flint acknowledged that such limits could
lead to a drop in operator revenue. He clarified:
“There will be some online firms in the short term that…make less
money as a consequence”.
Getting straight to the point, he added:
“but then…that spend shouldn’t happen anyway.”
That is a point that the Jockey Club should have considered when
its chief executive officer launched this petition. It has cited
a potential loss of £5 million on the horseracing betting levy,
which according to its own board’s annual report was worth £100
million. But what price a life? What price the number of people
who have been driven to complete suicide?
I return to the need for affordability checks. A year later, at
the 2020 Lords Committee, the UK’s biggest operators—the chief
executive officers of the big five—spoke enthusiastically about
the need for affordability checks as a key mechanism to reduce
harm. An industry CEO said that
“the way to go is affordability and to ensure that, when people
come to our sites, they can only afford to lose or bet an amount
that, quite frankly, they can afford and were comfortable
with.”
So what is new? What is new is that, since the White Paper, the
Government and the Gambling Commission have proposed threshold
figures for the checks. Affordability is no longer an abstract
concept; it is tied to precise thresholds.
The industry does not like the fact that the White Paper has
called its bluff, so it is kicking up a storm. It is clear that
those who might be categorised as the pro-gambling lobby and
those such as myself, who could be described as the safer
gambling lobby, agree that if we are to create a safe
environment, affordability is an area that needs tightening up. I
wonder whether that was explained to everyone who signed the
petition.
The petition states:
“The proposed checks could see bettors having to prove they can
afford their hobby if they sustain losses as low as £1.37 per
day.”
That figure has been scoffed at a few times in this debate, but
it is £500 a year. It may mean nothing to us as MPs on 86 grand a
year, but that £500 a year could be the difference for some poor
people who are trying to put money in the meter or food on the
table. What we are trying to do is to stop them getting to the
point at which they lose that money in the first place. Please do
not belittle that. If the checks say people can afford it, they
can afford it. We are trying to help those at risk. Surely all
gamblers can see that, because they understand risk.
The UK Government have already said that
“the proposed checks are only on the very highest spending online
customers”.
The Gambling Commission estimates that
“approximately 20% of customer accounts will meet the threshold
required for a financial vulnerability check”.
The next line of the petition is about the black market. The
Gambling Commission has already reported to us that the size of
the online black market has been overstated by the industry and
must be kept in proportion. It follows that if we want to prevent
the growth of the black market, the solution is regulation to
prevent harm that leads to addiction. It will eliminate demand
for a black market, not cause it. Harm prevention will mean fewer
addicts, fewer self-exclusions and fewer attempts to circumvent
the regulated market in the first place.
The key is in the last line of the petition:
“We are concerned there will also be a negative impact on British
horseracing’s finances due to a reduction in betting turnover and
resulting fall in Levy yield.”
That is a Trojan horse if ever I have seen one.
I have been listening with increasing disappointment to the tone
that the hon. Member has taken. Given the importance of tackling
problem gambling, does he recognise, like the 7,000 people who
live in my constituency, the importance of horseracing? Does he
recognise that horseracing betting has an equally low rate of
associated problem gambling as betting on the national lottery?
The national lottery is carved out of this proposal. Should not
horseracing betting also be carved out, so we can all concentrate
on tackling gambling harms, exactly as the hon. Member would like
us to?
I was bringing attention to the message that has clearly been
given out by the UK Government. The Government are keen to ensure
that the measures such as the proposed changes do not adversely
affect racing or interrupt the customer journey. They also cannot
push away high net worth individuals such as the owners and
trainers who invest in the sport. I would suggest that it is not
for me to say this; the Government are all over it. The
Government understand the difference between online gambling,
casino gambling and horseracing.
The key to the problem is that people are spending more than they
can afford. As a result, some are dying. That is the human cost,
and that cost is completely unacceptable.
7.04pm
(Barnsley East) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Sir George. I
refer to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial
Interests.
The fact that over 100,000 people have signed the petition on
financial risk checks in less than a month shows the strength of
feeling on the topic. I pay tribute to my hon. Friend the Member
for Neath () for leading this important
debate. This issue is important to everyone who offered their
signature, as well as to the gambling and racing industries,
which want to be sure that the checks are truly frictionless
before they are rolled out. It is also crucial for organisations
and families who are concerned about gambling harms and want
confirmation that the updated regulation in the gambling White
Paper will be going ahead. The Government must be able to strike
that balance, as they have promised.
I would like to set out the context for introducing financial
risk checks as part of the gambling White Paper more broadly.
Half of adults across the UK gamble each month. The vast majority
do so safely, moderately and in a way they enjoy. I remember my
nan going to bingo every week when I was growing up, and I have
always enjoyed going to the races—I was pleased to attend the St
Leger last year. For some, however, gambling can become a more
serious problem: 300,000 people across the country experience
problem gambling, and 1.8 million are considered to be at
elevated risk.
The last time gambling laws were updated was back in 2005. Since
then, the landscape has changed dramatically. Thanks to our
tablets, laptops and phones, most people now have the potential
to carry a casino in their pocket, meaning that they can gamble
anywhere and make huge losses in a very short time, as my hon.
Friend the Member for Swansea East () outlined; I really
appreciate the work that she has done over many years in this
area. Because of that rapid growth in technology and our growing
awareness of the impact of gambling harms, changes to our
gambling regulation are now long overdue.
In my time as shadow gambling Minister, I have met those who are
recovering from addition, as well as family members who have
suffered the unimaginable pain of losing a loved one. For those
people, it is absolutely clear that gambling harm has the
potential to be devastating, and that more must be done to ensure
that families are protected, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Sheffield Central () spoke powerfully about.
Affordability checks form part of the new, modernised system of
gambling regulation that is fit for the future. Accompanied by
other measures such as online stake limits, data sharing between
gambling firms and a crackdown through the regulator on black
market activity, they will ensure that the law does more to
protect children and adults who are vulnerable to harm.
The right hon. Member for Chingford and Woodford Green ( ) spoke about how early
intervention in the form of checks can make a difference and
change the course of addiction. That may well be the case—it is
important to make early interventions if we can—but it strikes me
that there is a piece missing, because it is not clear what
intervention will take place as a result of the checks. This is
perhaps not an issue that we can solve here today, but it needs
to be considered in the wider context of the White Paper.
As colleagues have outlined, it is also important that our
regulation recognises that many people enjoy betting safely and
without harm; the hon. Member for Shipley () outlined that point
robustly, as always. The Government must therefore be clear on
how they will actually go about ensuring that affordability
checks are accurate, frictionless and non-intrusive for
consumers, as they have promised. I will conclude my speech with
a number of specific questions for the Minister, but I will first
speak briefly about why, in this context, the racing industry in
particular is concerned about the nature of the checks.
Many Members have spoken about the impact that racecourses have
in their constituencies, and I will try to list them. We had the
hon. Member for Bath (), the right hon. Member for
West Suffolk () with Newmarket, the hon.
Member for Windsor () and the hon. Member for
Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson) with Cheltenham. The hon. Member for St
Helens North (), who is a huge champion for
the industry, spoke about his racecourse, Haydock. The hon.
Member for East Lothian () spoke about Musselburgh,
and the hon. Member for Waveney () spoke about the economic
benefit of racecourses in such areas. Apologies if I missed
anyone out.
Last week, I hosted a roundtable with representatives from the
racing sector, including those who started today’s petition. They
shared their thoughts on the potential unintended consequences of
the checks, which the hon. Member for Mid Norfolk () spoke about very
powerfully. Racing and gambling have a naturally symbiotic
relationship, with the success of each industry somewhat
dependent on the other. With more than 5 million spectators
enjoying a trip to the races each year, it is clear that many
people enjoy the combination too, making it the country’s second
favourite sport. However, as a result of the partnership, the
Government predict that the White Paper will cost the racing
industry £14.9 million, with the British Horseracing Authority
saying that that could rise to almost £50 million a year when
considering the impact of the levy, media rights deals and
overall funding.
In turn, as we have heard today, such losses could lead to lower
prize money, decreasing participation, job losses in the rural
economy and an overall decline in the sport. It is important for
racing that the Government and the Gambling Commission work with
the industry to ensure that financial risk checks are truly
frictionless, targeted and accurate.
The hon. Lady is being very generous, and I commend her on being
knowledgeable on the subject. I have a lot of time for her, as
she knows. Based on what she said, would she support the calls
that we have heard from many hon. Members today that perhaps a
distinction should be made between games of skill and games of
chance? I took from what she said that that would probably deal
with the two separate issues she referred to.
I understand that argument, and I have some sympathy for it.
However, I do not think that we can carve out horseracing in
particular as being free of harm; I simply do not think that is
the case. Of course the harm for the horses is less than some,
but it is greater than others. We need to strike a balance. I am
sympathetic to the argument made by the hon. Gentleman, and I am
sure that the Minister will pick it up when he speaks. That is
also why it is right that we should work to find a future-proof
settlement on the horseracing betting levy, which contributes
about £80 million to £100 million to the sport. I hope therefore
that the Minister can update us on how the review into that is
progressing.
Let me move on to the specifics of how the checks will be
conducted. The Minister must be clear on how friction will be
removed from the system. Indeed, in those rarer cases where it is
proposed that bank statements or payslips might be needed as part
of an enhanced check, it is unclear just how frictionless the
process could possibly be. Concerns have also been raised with me
about the value of using net losses alone without combining them
with other markers of harm to prompt an affordability check. As a
result, it would be helpful if the Minister could set out in full
the latest thinking on how the checks will be conducted, so that
they are accurately targeted and have limited user input. In the
absence of that, can he let us know when we might expect a full
response to the consultation?
The Gambling Commission confirmed late last week that the
lower-level checks will use only publicly available data and will
run on higher thresholds to start with. It also said that for
enhanced checks there will be a pilot to test the details of data
sharing. Can the Minister confirm the pilot to the House today
and outline how the Department will work with the commission,
credit agencies and the gambling industry to ensure its smooth
running? Further to that, it would be reassuring if the Minister
could set out how the pilot and higher threshold period will be
evaluated. For example, what issues will the commission look out
for, and what criteria will define success? It is important that
we get that right. If the checks are not frictionless or are more
disruptive than genuinely useful to those who are at risk, there
is a risk that customers will be driven from the regulated
industry to the black market, where there are no safer gambling
protections whatsoever. That is a real concern, as has been
spoken about today.
There is consensus on the need to update our regulation so that
vulnerable people are better protected from gambling harms in the
modern age. However, at the same time the punters, racing and the
gambling industry deserve some clarity about how the Government
will ensure that affordability checks are carried out with
accuracy and in a way that does not cause unnecessary friction
for those gambling responsibly. I look forward to hearing from
the Minister how the Department plans to strike that balance.
7.13pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Culture, Media and
Sport ()
I thank the hon. Member for Neath () for tabling this important
debate, as well as everyone who signed the petition. My hon.
Friend the Member for Tewkesbury (Mr Robertson) said that I
always turn up to these events; I must confess I did not know
that I had a choice. I may have made a different decision if I
knew that, but there we are.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and
Tweeddale () quite rightly mentioned the
book that he showed me. It looked like a very extensive book. I
have not had chance to read it all yet, but I am sure that
“Strongholds of Satan” by will be valuable as I
further my education in this whole exciting field of policy. In
her opening comments, the hon. Member for Barnsley East () outlined the varying
points that came up in the debate and the various views from
stakeholders, whichever side of the debate they might be on. I am
grateful for all the comments. The debate has been interesting
and thought-provoking, and it is good to hear those different
perspectives. That is why I always try to take the time to meet
and engage with people and, crucially, listen to the points put
forward to me.
As some have mentioned, we are walking a fine line and need to
get it right to help those who may be entering the risk of
gambling harm while ensuring that those who want to continue to
gamble safely can do so. I want to recognise the concerns that
many have had with the proposed system of checks for the
highest-spending online customers to help identify that harm.
Those concerns have been raised by colleagues, in the media and
certainly with me over the past few months. I believe that the
proposals for financial risk checks will represent a significant
improvement for both businesses and customers, compared with the
current situation.
A recent GambleAware study showed that almost three in five
adults support the introduction of the checks. None the less, we
and the Gambling Commission have listened and we want to get it
right. We are clear that the risk checks should not overregulate
the gambling sector, should not unduly disrupt the millions of
people who gamble without suffering harm, and should not cause
unnecessary damage to sectors that rely on betting, particularly
horseracing. We and the Gambling Commission both recognise that
it is not our job to tell people how to spend their money. As
outlined in the gambling White Paper, we want to balance that
freedom with the necessary action to tackle the devastating
consequences that harmful gambling can have on individuals and
communities.
We know that operators are operating onerous, ad hoc and
inconsistent so-called affordability checks on a number of
customers, often without being clear on why the checks are
happening and normally requiring customers to provide data
manually. The proposed system will be a significant improvement
by having clear and proportionate rules to which all operators
are held, allowing for financial data to be shared seamlessly
with operators instead of burdening customers with information
requests. The Gambling Commission’s consultation on these checks
closed in October. I know from our discussions that it has given
careful consideration to the nearly 2,000 responses that it has
received, and it has been working very closely with relevant
stakeholders, including my Department, industry representatives,
the Information Commissioner’s Office, the financial services
sector and others, to refine the proposals.
Understanding consumer perspective is vital for the commission.
That is why it has a programme of research on the consumer voice,
which is an ongoing piece of research using qualitative and
quantitative methods to gather consumer perspectives, including
on the consultation proposals relating to financial risk. That
research has helped inform its thinking and will be published by
the commission alongside the consultation response. I am glad
that the points raised today reflect that some of the issues
facing punters are not down to just these checks—other issues
have quite rightly been raised.
Following the publication of a blog by the commission on 22
February, I am pleased to be able to provide colleagues with an
update on these checks. Firstly, the Gambling Commission has
confirmed that it will be proceeding with the proposal for
financial risk checks. That includes the frictionless,
light-touch financial vulnerability checks and the enhanced ones.
However, following feedback through the consultation, the
commission has confirmed that it will not require gambling
businesses to consider an individual’s personal details, such as
their postcode or job title, as part of the checks. I know that
was a key concern for those who signed the petition, and I hope
that demonstrates that the commission is carefully listening to
the concerns as it finalises how the checks will work.
To ease the introduction of those checks, as we have heard they
will initially come into force at a higher threshold for a short
period, before reverting to a lower threshold later in the year.
We expect the lower threshold to be closely aligned with that
proposed in the White Paper, which will enable a smoother
implementation for the small number of affected consumers. The
checks will not be intrusive, and will use publicly available
data—as has already been said.
The commission will require the industry to introduce these
frictionless, light-touch checks in two stages; that is intended
to happen over the course of this summer. Enhanced financial risk
assessments will also be implemented for the important
protections they can offer consumers who may be at financial
risk, and to ensure that assessing financial risk can be done in
a more frictionless manner than is currently possible. The
Gambling Commission will therefore conduct a pilot and data
collection period. That will involve the commission working with
the credit reference agencies and a selection of gambling
businesses to ensure that the process of assessment is as
effective and streamlined as possible. The pilot will run for a
minimum of four months, during which time the commission will
consider all issues that arise. The commission is clear that this
process will help to refine the final requirements and models for
data sharing, and help to ensure that the intentions and
commitments in the White Paper are fulfilled.
I am sure everybody agrees it is important that we do not skip
ahead to full implementation before getting the details right.
Indeed, I know that many right hon. and hon. Members, including
my hon. Friend the Member for Shipley (), have made suggestions to me
and to the commission. All of us want to find a solution that
actively protects those most at risk of harm. The commission is
actively considering all the proposals—including my hon.
Friend’s—and I can confirm that many of the ideas that have been
raised will be explored during the pilot stage, including looking
at whether CATO or SCOR data is being used. By doing so, the
commission can ensure that all the decisions that will be made
are based on the evidence of what is working.
Will that include carving out horseracing in the same way that
the national lottery has been carved out? Both of those have the
lowest impact in terms of gambling harm and it would be
inappropriate to treat the two differently.
I have heard the national lottery mentioned a few times. Yes, it
is unique—it is under its own separate legislative framework—but
under the fourth licence conditions, player protection
requirements will be increased and there will be conditions on
payments for support, research, education and treatment.
I have also heard arguments for a carve-out for horseracing. I
acknowledge that greater gambling harm occurs in online casinos,
but we know that those who experience gambling harm use multiple
products, and some have been using horseracing products. I have
heard harrowing stories of people who have made losses on
horseracing products alone.
(St Helens North) (Ind)
Will the Minister give way?
I am going to crack on because I do not have much time left and I
want to get through as much as I can. If I have time at the end I
will happily take the hon. Gentleman’s intervention.
I hope it is clear that both the Government and the commission
want this to be a genuine pilot of how data sharing would work.
Throughout the pilot, gambling businesses will not be expected to
act on the data they receive, although they will of course be
expected to continue to protect consumers by implementing their
own existing consumer safety controls and to remain compliant
with our existing regulatory requirements.
The Government and I are supportive of the evidence-led and
consumer-centred approach that has been proposed for the pilot
period, and the Gambling Commission will publish its full
consultation response very soon. I remind colleagues that this is
about online betting; people who go to racecourses or betting
shops will not be a part of this, and the “day out” experience
will not be affected.
In the meantime, we have also challenged the industry to be more
transparent with customers. Currently, requirements are in place
for gambling operators to identify customers at risk of harm and
to take action, but there are no specific safer gambling
requirements on how or when gambling operators must consider the
financial circumstances of their customers. Where there have been
failures to identify and act on clear signs of harm, the Gambling
Commission has not hesitated to take action, including with
fines, but there has been inconsistency across the sector. That
is why we and the commission are working closely with the
industry with it, so that we have a much better system in this
interim period.
In the light of that, and in my meetings with colleagues and with
the Horseracing Bettors Forum, I have urged the members of the
industry to work together to mitigate the impact of customers
having to provide information and documentation while we develop
the new, frictionless system of checks. We understand that they
are working towards delivering an industry-led code that would
apply in the interim period. I know that progress is being made
and I hope that we will be able to report that an agreement has
been reached soon, so that customers have more clarity about what
is expected.
Let me address the concerns raised here today about the black
market. I assure colleagues that I take the threats posed by
illegal online marketing and markets very seriously indeed. We
know that they can pose a variety of risks to consumers,
including by allowing access to those who have self-excluded
through GAMSTOP. That is unfair to those businesses that abide by
the rules. As set out in the White Paper, we committed to giving
the Gambling Commission more powers to block and disrupt illegal
gambling websites. We are delivering on that commitment through
the Criminal Justice Bill, which will allow the commission to
suspend IP addresses and domain names if they are being used for
the purposes of serious crime connected with unlicensed gambling.
The commission has also been able to invest in work to combat
illegal gambling and it has succeeded in disrupting and reducing
illegal traffic into British gambling markets. That work should
be enhanced by the new disruption powers that the commission will
receive once the Criminal Justice Bill has passed through
Parliament.
I will now address horseracing specifically, as it has been
raised here today. The British Horseracing Authority and other
stakeholders in the industry have voiced concerns about the
impact of the checks on the sport. I assure everybody that we
have heard the concerns and take them extremely seriously. I have
already met with many colleagues here today, including members of
the APPG on racing and bloodstock. I have also met the
Horseracing Bettors Forum to hear a customer perspective. I will
continue to engage with the sector and those affected by the
reforms, because the Government are strong supporters of
horseracing. I acknowledge the many points that have been made
about the significant contribution that horseracing makes to our
economy and the central role that it plays in the livelihoods of
rural communities. The employment that it supports across
racecourses, training yards, breeding operations and related
sectors reflects a powerful industry that is respected at home
and abroad. Many colleagues have spoken here today or written to
me on this subject, and I saw at first hand the care that is
given to racehorses on a recent visit to a training yard in
Middleham. I am therefore clear that we must ensure that the
checks do not adversely affect racing or those who work in the
sector, or interrupt the customer journey. They also must not
push away high-net-worth individuals such as owners and trainers
that invest in the sport.
The Gambling Commission has worked very closely with operators to
explore the practical aspects of implementing the checks, and
colleagues have said that they have seen an improved relationship
between the commission and the industry. The commission has also
been carefully considering responses to the consultation, which
have helped to shape the implementation plans. We want to protect
those at risk—I make no apology for our doing that—with minimal
disruption to the majority, who I recognise bet on horseracing
with no ill effect.
We recognise the importance of horseracing, but we know also that
the levy is an important piece of work. I am about to run out of
time, but I will happily write to colleagues to update them.
Discussions are ongoing—I know that the Betting and Gaming
Council had discussions this morning about an offer that is on
the table for the levy—and I hope to be able to update colleagues
shortly. With that, given that my time has run out, I apologise
for not covering all the points, but this was an extensive
debate.
(in the Chair)
Very briefly—Christina Rees.
7.29pm
Very briefly, and on behalf of the Petitions Committee, I thank
all right hon. and hon. Members for their very valuable
contributions.
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