MAJOR U.S. LOBBYING EFFORT FROM BRITISH ONLINE
GAMBLING COMPANIES
21 August 2009
The Great British Lobby spending millions
Interesting industry reading over the weekend came from
the British newspaper The Telegraph, which carried an
article on the lobbying investment being made by UK
groups interested in helping to shape American
legislation on Internet gambling.
The newspaper
reports that online payment services company UC Group,
which is apparently advised by former Home Secretary
David Blunkett, is one of several British companies
spending millions of pounds lobbying American
politicians. The firm has spent some GBP 3.2 million
($5.23 million) on lobbying fees in recent years, and is
just one of several companies deploying millions to
influence gambling legislation in the US.
The
major online gambling groups Sportingbet, PartyGaming
and Pokerstars have all hired high profile lobbying
firms in the US to represent their interests as they
prepare for the likely opening-up of the US online
gaming market, the Telegraph reveals, joining a range of
other UK-based commercial groups lobbying for change in
different sectors of the US economy.
While
lobbying in the US is legal and a recognised part of
Washington's political culture, many people will be
surprised by the extent of British companies'
involvement in the process, claims the newspaper.
Companies in the UK – especially those in
potentially controversial sectors such as online
gambling, drinks and tobacco – spend significant amounts
lobbying British politicians but there is no requirement
to disclose the scope of that spending.
The
payments in the US have come to light because the
American system requires all lobbying to be disclosed on
a quarterly basis. However, experts say the amount
companies spend on shaping legislation in the US is far
higher than the lobbying fees suggest because of other
ancillary costs which do not have to be accounted for.
UC Group acts for 10 gambling companies offering
back-office and anti-money laundering operations, and
hopes to profit from any opening of the market. The
group has worked to promote Senator Barney Frank's
efforts to overturn the ban on online gaming.
The size of the company's lobbying expenses – which
stretch to $2.31 million since last September alone –
are particularly eye-catching given it made just GBP 3
million in pre-tax profits last year.
Kobus
Paulsen, UC Group's chief executive, suggested it was
part of the group's long-term strategy. "We are certain
that our efforts will yield an open market for non-US
based gaming operators," he told the Telegraph.
Ruth Parasol and Russell De Leon, the founders of
PartyGaming, have spent up to GBP 929 000 on lobbying
fees since last September to influence online gaming
legislation in the US. It remains unclear whether any of
those fees have been channelled towards lobbying over
issues related to their potential prosecution for
allegedly breaking US laws banning internet gambling.
Lobbying records for Sportingbet, the online
gaming firm that also faces potential charges, show the
company has paid $60 000 over the last year in relation
to the "settlement of potential criminal charges related
to online gambling".
The Telegraph also looks at
the Camelot Group, operator of the National Lottery in
the UK, which registered as a lobbying company in the US
in November 2008. The group spent $20 000 in fees
lobbying on issues on "federal regulations regarding
private companies managing state lottery systems" before
terminating its contract with O'Neill and Associates,
the lobbying firm, in April this year.
The
strategy appeared to pay dividends in June when the
California State Lottery Commission approved the release
of up to $13.5 million to pay consultancy fees to
outside advisers, with Camelot expected to be the chief
beneficiary.
Successful British companies in
America appear to regard lobbying as a routine expense
in their US operations. One executive at a company
operating in the lobbying market said: "You simply have
to put your money to work in that way at times. If we
opted not to lobby, legislation would not be promoted."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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