HAS THE NEW BRIT PM COOLED TOWARD SUPER CASINOS?
13 July 2007
Statements in Prime Minister's Question Time
suggest another gambling review may be on the cards
Viewers watching the British Prime Minister's Question
Time in Parliament this week, and reading a later report
in The Times saw new Prime Minister Gordon Brown
apparently taking another look at British gaming law.
The Times reported that Brown has "...killed off the
chances of a supercasino opening in Britain, in his most
explicit break from the Blair era to date.
"Despite four years of intense lobbying by casino
organisations, an unprecedented competition between
councils and a huge parliamentary effort, the Prime
Minister today signalled that vast Las Vegas-style
gambling dens will not come to Britain."
Although Brown stopped short of declaring that no
regional casinos would be built, The Times quotes
unspecified government sources saying that the plan for
regional casinos is "dead in the water". Plans for 16
smaller casinos may return to Parliament over the next
few months.
Mr Brown previously indicated his lack of enthusiasm for
super casinos, having imposed a 50 percent tax on any
large gambling venues at the last election. By contrast,
his predecessor repeatedly indicated that he was happy
for unlimited numbers of super-casinos, only restricted
by the market, because he believed they brought
regeneration benefits to run down areas.
Cancellations at this stage are unlikely to be popular
in Manchester which won the competition to run Britain's
first supercasino earlier this year, or in Blackpool,
which was still hoping it might get one too. Casino
firms and councils spent millions trying to attract
super-casinos to their areas.
Answering a question from a Labour MP in the Commons,
Brown said that regeneration may be a better way of
meeting the economic and social needs of hard-pressed
areas than the creation of super casinos. He told Andy
Reed, the Labour MP for Loughborough that this would be
taken into consideration by ministers during a period of
“reflection” over the summer.
Brown said: “This is an issue on which there is no
consensus found in the two Houses of Parliament. And it
is an issue now subject to reflection over the next few
months. In September we will have a report that will
look at gambling in our country - the incidence and
prevalence of it and the social effects of it.
“I hope that during these summer months we can look at
whether regeneration in the areas for the supercasinos
maybe a better way of meeting their economic and social
needs than the creation of supercasinos.”
Last month the British Casino Association (BCA) lost a
high court challenge regarding government plans for
seventeen regional casinos.
A spokesperson for the British Casino Association said
that certainty was needed, and that to date it has been
absent. “It is important that this situation is resolved
quickly and decisively, he said. The BCA has
consistently called for the Government to look again at
its policies in relation to the new Regional, Small and
Large casinos, and we will be urging Ministers to take
this opportunity to amend the Act in a way which meets
all of its objectives without needlessly penalising
existing businesses,” the spokesperson said.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|