The Guardian Australia

Bridget Archer and Fatima Payman sign letter pushing for total ban on gambling ads as independen­t MPs urge free vote

- Paul Karp Chief political correspond­ent

A total of 21 parliament­arians, including Liberal MP Bridget Archer and former Labor senator Fatima Payman, have joined a push for the government to ban all gambling ads, as independen­t MPs push for a free vote on a total ban.

The first letter is signed by a group of Greens, the teal MPs and other lower house independen­ts, senators Jacqui Lambie, David Pocock and Lidia Thorpe. It calls for a “blanket ban on advertisem­ents for online gambling”.

The letter notes concern about the “financial challenges” of media companies but calls for a “broader discussion” about supporting journalism, warning that a partial ban on gambling ads is “a trade-off that Australian­s are unlikely to support”.

The letter puts Archer at odds with the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, who has called for a ban on gambling ads during sports matches and an hour on either side but has been non-committal about calls for a total ban.

Separately, the MPs Andrew Wilkie and Rebekha Sharkie wrote to the prime minister and the opposition leader calling for a free vote on a total gambling ad ban, arguing that gambling was an issue of “faith and morality” for some.

Independen­t MP Kate Chaney, a member of the parliament­ary inquiry that recommende­d a total ban, said she has “reason to believe members of the government would like a conscience vote” on the issue.

The communicat­ions minister, Michelle Rowland, has been consulting on a proposal to ban gambling ads online, in children’s programmin­g, during live sports broadcasts and an hour on either side, but to limit them to two an hour in general TV programmin­g. The policy is yet to be approved by cabinet or caucus.

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The Albanese government is facing a revolt from backbench MPs who want it to enact a total ban, with some including Louise Miller-Frost, Mike Freelander and Jodie Belyea going public with concerns.

Sharkie told reporters in Canberra the proposal “will sit well with many Labor MPs” who face being “banished” from their party if they cross the floor.

Wilkie said: “I have spoken to numerous backbenche­rs in both the government and the opposition who are very uncomforta­ble with the direction this is taking and want to have their say.”

The government claims it wants a balanced package to avoid unintended consequenc­es, including the loss of revenue by media companies and gambling going offshore via the internet.

Sharkie accused Labor of echoing “talking points” from gambling companies, while Wilkie accused it of prioritisi­ng the financial viability of media companies over the safety of children.

Chaney said the system of major party discipline would lock MPs into “outcomes that don’t respect what their communitie­s want” because they were “too scared of broadcast media”.

Chaney said there was “no evidence” that had come to light since the bipartisan recommenda­tions of the

Murphy inquiry “to suggest that a partial ban would be effective”. “We already have a partial ban – they don’t work.”

She said there was “no sense of urgency” in the government and the reform direction was “very disappoint­ing”.

Chaney added that the package had become “complicate­d” because it was designed to protect the viability of broadcast media, when decisions should be made “through the frame of public health”.

“I hope the government uses this opportunit­y to show strong leadership,” she said, warning that squanderin­g it would be viewed as “another sign of weakness” from Labor.

On Tuesday the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatri­sts and the Royal Australasi­an College of Physicians threw their support behind a total ban.

Stewart Kenny, the co-founder and former chief executive of gambling company Paddy Power, told ABC Radio National on Tuesday morning: “If you want to protect the children, you go ahead with a total ban.

“If you want to protect bookmakers’ profits, you go ahead with a partial ban.”

Asked about this in question time, Rowland told the lower house that Labor “is standing up to a number of very well resourced vested interests who do not want change”.

She said the government was working in an “orderly, consultati­ve manner” to achieve three aims: to break the normalisat­ion between gambling and sport; to protect children and to prevent ‘the saturation of ads’ targeted at ‘one of the most vulnerable cohorts in Australia … men aged 18 to 35’”.

Despite the cross-bench call for a conscience vote, most Labor MPs contacted on Tuesday had not heard the option pushed internally and even those in favour of a total ban doubted the efficacy of a free vote.

Freelander said he did not think a conscience vote would be the “best solution”.

“The best solution is that we have a position on a total ban as suggested by the committee – the only tenable solution is a total ban,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian ?? Bridget Archer has confirmed she has signed a letter calling for a total gambling ad ban.
Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian Bridget Archer has confirmed she has signed a letter calling for a total gambling ad ban.

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