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Select Committee
Sixth Report - Trusted voices

Report Apr. 12 2024

Committee: Culture, Media and Sport Sub-committee on Online Harms and Disinformation Committee

Found: man/woman on the street” and lawyers, but well below professors (76%), scientists (74%), and even football


Select Committee
Fifth Report - Creator remuneration

Report Apr. 10 2024

Committee: Culture, Media and Sport Committee (Department: Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport)

Found: The intention of this reconfiguration was to look across the digital, culture, creative industries, gambling


Select Committee
Fourth Report - Equity in Cricket

Report Apr. 05 2024

Committee: Culture, Media and Sport Committee (Department: Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport)

Found: Session 2023–24 Number Title Reference 1st Safety at major sporting events HC 174 2nd Gambling regulation


Closed Petition closed 30th May 2024

Ban gambling adverts and sponsorship in football - Final Signatures: 30

I want the Government to prevent gambling being advertised in football, or being a sponsor of football clubs, to protect children from this.

Found: Many children watch football, meaning they can see gambling adverts.


Written Question
Sports: Sponsorship
Thursday 4th April 2024

Asked by: Lord Foster of Bath (Liberal Democrat - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask His Majesty's Government, further to their policy paper High Stakes: Gambling Reform for the Digital Age, published on 27 April, when they will publish the cross-sport Code of Conduct outlined in that paper; and whether they will include an implementation timeline.

Answered by Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Culture, Media and Sport)

All domestic sports governing bodies have agreed to four core principles underpinning the cross-sport Code of Conduct on gambling sponsorship: (i) protecting children and young people; (ii) socially responsible promotion; (iii) reinvestment in sport; and (iv) maintaining sporting integrity. These principles put in place a robust minimum standard for sponsorship across all sports. Through the code, a proportion of in-stadium advertising will be dedicated to safer gambling, and replica kits for adults will be made available without gambling logos, alongside the existing requirements for children’s replica kits.

We want sports governing bodies to have sufficient flexibility to implement these principles in a way which maximises impact for the sports and their fans. Bespoke, sport-specific codes are currently being designed by individual governing bodies, and will be published and implemented in due course. The Premier League and English Football League plan to have their codes in place by next season. DCMS will continue to work closely with sports bodies to ensure that implementation and enforcement processes are robust.


Departmental Publication (Transparency)
Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport

Mar. 21 2024

Source Page: DCMS: Ministerial gifts, hospitality, travel and meeting Q3 23/24
Document: (webpage)

Found: reform To discuss the Gambling White Paper Stuart Andrew 2023-11-14 Gambling Commission To discuss the


Written Question
Sports: Codes of Practice
Thursday 21st March 2024

Asked by: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative - Chingford and Woodford Green)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, what steps her Department is taking to ensure that the cross-sport Code of Conduct is (a) robust and (b) workable in practice; and what lessons she has learnt from the application of CAP code 2.1 for regulation of breaches of the Code.

Answered by Stuart Andrew - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Culture, Media and Sport)

All domestic sports governing bodies have agreed to four core principles underpinning the cross-sport Code of Conduct on gambling sponsorship: (i) protecting children and young people (ii) socially responsible promotion (iii) reinvestment into sport (iv) maintaining sporting integrity. These principles put in place a robust minimum standard for sponsorship across all sports. Through the code, a proportion of in-stadia advertising will be dedicated to safer gambling messaging, and replica kits for adults will be made available without gambling logos, alongside the existing requirements for childrens’ replica kits.

Sports governing bodies must have sufficient flexibility to implement these principles in a way which maximises impact for the sports and their fans. Bespoke, sport-specific Codes are currently being designed by individual sports governing bodies, and will be implemented in due course. The Premier League and English Football League plan to have their Codes in place by next season. DCMS will continue to work closely with sports on their implementation and enforcement practices.

As a licence condition, gambling operators must comply with the restrictions set out in the Advertising Codes, which includes robust rules under section 2 regulating the recognition of marketing communications. Under these rules, marketing communications must be obviously identifiable as such and make clear their commercial intent, if that is not obvious from the context. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) can and does take action against breaches, and a recent ruling can be found here. Operators are liable to enforcement action from the Gambling Commission if affiliates which they pay to carry out marketing activities do not comply with the rules.


Select Committee
Commercial Determinants Research Group at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and the University of Edinburgh
PHS0623 - Prevention in health and social care

Written Evidence Mar. 20 2024

Inquiry: Prevention in health and social care
Inquiry Status: Closed
Committee: Health and Social Care Committee (Department: Department of Health and Social Care)

Found: centres-projects- groups/cdrg) with experience of analysing misinformation from the alcohol, tobacco, gambling


Bill Documents
20 Mar 2024 - Impact Assessments
Impact Assessment from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport
Football Governance Bill 2023-24

Found: the men’s English football pyramid: the Premier League (20 clubs), the English Football League (72


Departmental Publication (Policy paper)
Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport

Mar. 19 2024

Source Page: Football Governance Bill: supporting documents
Document: Impact assessment: Regulation of English men’s professional football (PDF)

Found: Football Governance Bill: supporting documents