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David Cameron vows to 'look' at curbing bookies' roulette machines | David Cameron vows to 'look' at curbing bookies' roulette machines |
(about 1 hour later) | |
David Cameron has promised to take a "proper look" at whether high stakes roulette machines should be banned from betting shops. | David Cameron has promised to take a "proper look" at whether high stakes roulette machines should be banned from betting shops. |
He was responding to a question from Labour MP Tom Watson, who said the "addictive" machines had transformed the "local bookies" into "High Street digital casinos". | He was responding to a question from Labour MP Tom Watson, who said the "addictive" machines had transformed the "local bookies" into "High Street digital casinos". |
He called on the government to follow Ireland's example by banning them. | He called on the government to follow Ireland's example by banning them. |
Mr Cameron said it was "worth having a proper look at this issue". | Mr Cameron said it was "worth having a proper look at this issue". |
Fixed Odds Betting Terminals, which allow punters to gamble up to £100 every 20 seconds, have fuelled a boom in betting shops on Britain's High Streets. | |
Takings from the machines now account for nearly half of the big bookmakers' annual profits, despite being limited to four terminals per shop. | |
Critics say the machines are highly addictive and lead to crime and poverty but the gambling industry says there is no hard evidence of this and have promised a new code of conduct to allow players to limit their own stakes. | |
'Decent approach' | |
Fixed Odds Betting Terminals had been included in a three-yearly review of the last Labour government's 2005 Gambling Act, which also covered fruit machines in pub and cafes, as well as high stakes machines in casinos. | |
But Culture Secretary Maria Miller last month ruled out calls to dramatically reduce the stakes and prizes on the machines, keeping the maximum stake at £100 and the maximum payout at £500. | |
A separate investigation, by the Responsible Gambling Trust, is being carried out into the potential harm caused by Fixed Odds Betting Terminals and whether they are as addictive as campaigners claim. | |
The DCMS has promised to review the outcome of the Responsible Gambling Trust probe in September, when it could take action to reduce stakes and prizes without passing primary legislation. | |
David Cameron appeared to suggest, at Prime Minister's Questions, that the government could go further than that. | |
He said he had been lobbied by MPs on all sides and said "I do think it is worth having a proper look at this issue, to see what we can do to make sure that, yes, we have bookmakers that are not over-regulated. | |
"But, on the other hand, a fair approach and a decent approach that prevents problem gambling." | |
But Adrian Parkinson, of the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, said he did not hold out much hope of the government taking action before the next election in 2015. | |
"It was a pretty vague answer... but at least it's on his agenda. | |
"Somebody needs to make a decision about what to do. These machines have been around for 10 or 11 years now." | |
The Lib Dems backed calls to give local councils the power to limit the number of betting shops in their area, in a party conference vote last month. | |
The Fixed Odds Betting Terminals issue has also been taken up by a number of MPs concerned about the proliferation of bookmakers in their constituencies, particularly in poorer areas. | |
Tom Watson, who recently stood down as Labour's general election campaign chief, said in a blog for the Huffington Post last week that "these pernicious machines are destroying the lives of the poorest in society". |
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