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Australian Politicians Took $147,000 Of Match Tickets While
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<br>Politicians took 312 sport tickets while parliament was considering betting reform<br><br><br>Tickets deserved A$ 245,000 ($147,000)<br> <br><br>Gambling marketing in spite of public recommendation<br><br><br>(Adds Kate Chaney remark in paragraph 20)<br><br><br>By Byron Kaye<br><br><br>SYDNEY, April 16 (Reuters) - Australian politicians were gifted about A$ 245,000 ($147,000) in match tickets over nearly 2 years by the country's most popular sporting leagues as part of a lobbying project against a proposed restriction on [https://wikibuilding.org/index.php?title=User:ModestaPhillip marketing] of online gaming, according to Reuters computations based on federal government documents.<br><br><br>Lobbying by the gaming market versus the restriction has been reported formerly in media however the calculation of the total worth of tickets stated by politicians in the parliamentary present register shows the [http://siva-smart.ch/index.php?title=Benutzer:MWRDelilah function played] by sporting bodies and provides a dollar quantity for the very first time.<br><br><br>Labor Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had assured a crackdown on gambling marketing following a 2023 parliamentary query ordered by his federal government that recommended a "thorough restriction on all types of advertising for online gambling".<br><br><br>But he took the concern off the legislative agenda late last year and has left it to be considered by a new parliament to be formed following a May 3 general election that his party is tipped to win by a narrow margin. Polls reveal that three-quarters of Australians desire a ban.<br><br><br>"We understand vested interests have actually been lobbying difficult to avoid a ban and the level of soft diplomacy exposed by this analysis of stated presents to political leaders is deeply worrying," stated David Pocock, an independent senator.<br><br><br>"It is terrible that 18 months after the landmark report into online gaming harm, and after a complete regard to a Labor federal government, the prime minister has actually stopped working to take any meaningful action to ban betting marketing."<br><br><br>Albanese and the AFL did not react to Reuters requests for comment. The NRL decreased comment.<br><br><br>Such lobbying is not unlawful in Australia but individual presents worth over A$ 300 gotten by parliamentarians need to be reported to the prime minister's workplace, which preserves the parliamentary present register, a public database.<br><br><br>It reveals that politicians from both Australia's primary parties received 312 complimentary tickets in between June 28, 2023, when the federal government report suggested a ban on online gambling ads, and March 28 this year when parliament was liquified.<br><br><br>There was no cost ascribed to the tickets however Reuters calculated their worth based on the least expensive business box seat. The calculations were confirmed by Hunter Fujak, senior lecturer in sports management at Deakin University, and Tim Harcourt, primary economic expert at the [https://www.pentaktino.gr/en-gb/journal3/blog/post?journal_blog_post_id=9 University] of Technology, Sydney's Centre for Sport, Business and Society.<br><br><br>"It's a sensible estimate, most likely on the conservative side," Harcourt stated.<br><br><br>PM, OPPOSITION LEADER GIVEN TICKETS<br><br><br>Albanese received A$ 29,000 worth of tickets, primarily to grand finals and video games played by his NRL home team, the South Sydney Rabbitohs, the gift register revealed.<br><br><br>Peter Dutton, leader of the opposition conservative union, received A$ 21,350 of tickets throughout the duration, the register shows.<br><br><br>Dutton's office did not react to a demand for comment.<br><br><br>The gifted tickets over the 21-month period compared with tickets worth an [http://47.107.53.2073000/jerrellheredia estimated] A$ 234,000 offered to political leaders in the previous parliamentary term from 2019 to 2022, although sports participation at that time was affected by COVID-19 shutdowns. Data before 2019 was not readily available.<br><br><br>[https://pedu.li/barthines Australians lose] the most on gaming on the planet on a per capita basis, federal government data programs. Consultancy H2 Gambling Capital estimates bettors in Australia will lose A$ 34 billion in 2025. The country's sports bodies benefit because, unlike in many other nations, they take a percentage cut of money bet on their video games. They also earn incomes from sponsorship and broadcast rights.<br><br><br>In a confidential submission to government, the NRL said the percentage sufficed receives from betting, presently about A$ 70 million a year, would be more than halved if the restriction comes into force, said an individual who saw the file. The source declined to be determined because the submission has not been released openly.<br><br><br>The portion cut, although a small part of its A$ 745 million total earnings in 2024, is the NRL's fastest-growing earnings stream after increasing fifteen-fold in a decade, the person said.<br><br><br>The NRL on the other hand associates about one-third of the A$ 400 million a year it makes in broadcast rights - its primary earner - to sports wagering marketing, the [https://protec.com.pt/classic-watches individual stated].<br><br><br>Kate Chaney, an independent who was on the parliamentary committee that [https://bandana.bg/blog/kak-bandite-se-razpoznavat-spored-bandanata produced] the 2023 report requiring the restriction, stated Australian sporting bodies were "addicted to betting cash" and "making decisions based on what's great for their monetary viability, not for sport in Australia".<br><br><br>The government did not respond to concerns about the submission and its consultation procedure, while the NRL declined comment.<br><br><br>LOBBYING GROUP<br><br><br>After the report advising reform was published, the Coalition of Major Professional and Participation Sports (COMPPS), a lobbying group for the NRL, the AFL and other sports bodies, coordinated a campaign to lobby political leaders with consistent messaging versus the restriction, stated 3 individuals acquainted with the preparation.<br><br><br>They decreased to be recognized mentioning the [https://wiki.arbyten.de/index.php?title=Benutzer:BettinaParenteau sensitivity] of the topic.<br><br><br>COMPPS members welcomed politicians to events and seated them close to sports body officials, primarily from the NRL and AFL, who were briefed on how to go over the impact of the advertising restriction, stated 2 individuals included in the planning.<br><br><br>The members shared info about which politicians to target based upon who was influential in federal government or enthusiastic about a specific sport, the people added.<br><br><br>COMPPS did not instantly respond to demands for remark.<br><br><br>"You're not just buying them a ticket in package and providing hospitality, you have actually got their ear for the length of the game," said Charles Livingstone, an associate teacher of public health at Monash University and member of the World Health Organisation's Expert Group on Gambling.<br><br><br>"These guys remain in a position to plant concepts and to influence politicians in manner ins which no one else can."<br><br><br>Both the NRL and the AFL documented their opposition to the restriction in messages to Albanese within days of grand last events attended by the prime minister and other senior politicians in 2015. The [https://adsintro.com/index.php?page=user&action=pub_profile&id=703778 AFL proposed] an "option ... regulatory structure", according to an October 1 e-mail from the AFL to Albanese. Albanese's workplace produced the e-mail following a discovery demand by Pocock, the independent senator.<br><br><br>Albanese's workplace confirmed it had [http://artesav.com/blog/new-products/another-blog-post received] the [https://jskenglish.com/forums/users/suzannagorsuch2/ correspondence] from both the NRL and AFL but did not give information.<br><br><br>Louis Francis, a [https://chupin-philippe.com/portfolio_page/cacf-premiers-secours/p-cacf-1er-secours-02/ public health] academic at Curtin University, said completion outcome - betting reform stalled in the face of frustrating public support - was testimony to the "friendships and connections" sporting bodies might make by welcoming political leaders to games.<br><br><br>Free tickets for political leaders amounted to "an actually little price to pay to get access to political choice makers," she said. "And the return is fantastic." (Reporting by Byron Kaye, with extra reporting by Lewis Jackson; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)<br>
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