The online gambling sector’s peak body – Responsible Wagering Australia,which includes Sportsbet as the biggest industry player – is lobbying Rowland about a move to prohibit the use of credit cards to gamble.
While the sector supports the principle of the ban,it does not want the government to amend the Interactive Gambling Act.
Former ICAC counsellor Geoffrey Watson SC,pictured here in 2014,says political parties should not be taking money from big gambling.Credit:Nick Moir
The four gambling sources said betting firms feared any parliamentary debate on the legislation because anti-gambling MPs across the political spectrum could join forces to propose more radical legislative changes that could crimp the firms’ revenue.
“Sportsbet and the rest of them are scared of this bill coming up for debate because they know which way the momentum is moving,” a source said.
Rowland’s office is also talking with the industry about a national self-exclusion register which would allow problem gamblers to block themselves from online wagering sites. The start date for the program,called BetStop,has been delayed by several years.
The sector requested a delay to the rollout until after last year’s spring racing carnival,government and gambling sources said,because embedding a new IT system into its network could present difficulties at a time of heightened demand.
Sports betting is hugely popular in Australia.Credit:Shutterstock
A Responsible Wagering Australia spokeswoman has confirmed it had raised new concerns with the government about the potential for BetStop,which would collect user data,to be hacked.
She said amid “the fallout of the recent Optus and Medibank data breaches,it is imperative that BetStop is secured against data thieves”.
The spokeswoman argued the act was a poor way to restrict the use of credit cards because people would still use those cards on offshore gambling websites.
Rowland is also the president of the Labor Party branch in NSW,the state in which gambling companies are prohibited from giving money to state MPs and candidates. NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet is preparing to ban political donations from registered clubs.
Loading
Research from the Centre for Public Integrity posits that $1 billion in donations has been effectively hidden from public view over the past two decades because individual donations contained in the aggregate amount fell below the amount at which public disclosure is required. This figure currently sits at $15,200.
Sportsbet donated $278,000 in 2021-22,$143,000 to the Coalition and $135,000 to Labor.
A spokesman for Sportsbet,who noted non-online bookmakers also donated heavily,said:“Sportsbet’s donations are disclosed in accordance with the law.”
The Albanese government,which won the election promising to act with integrity,hasflagged its intention to lower the disclosure cap to $1000 as part of a broader suite of changes to make politics more transparent.
Australians are some of the biggest users of online sports betting in the world. Losses in 2021,as some people had more money to spend amid lockdowns,grew by $3.2 billion to $7.1 billion,as shown by figures from consultancy H2 Gambling Capital.
The government is also mulling clampdowns on the online betting sector,government sources confirmed. Concurrently,Labor backbencher Peta Murphy is chairing a parliamentary committee probing reforms such as restricting gambling advertising,which is supported by many Labor,Greens and independent MPs as well as Coalition members such as former speaker Andrew Wallace.
Cut through the noise of federal politics with news,views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley.Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.