All 7 Debates between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay

Mon 9th Dec 2024
Wed 4th Dec 2024
Wed 4th Dec 2024
Mon 2nd Dec 2024
Tue 25th Jan 2022

Football Governance Bill [HL]

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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My Lords, it is telling that so many noble Lords from both principal sides of your Lordships’ House have tabled amendments about the regulatory principles established by the Bill, which have been gathered in this group. The noble Lord, Lord Watson of Invergowrie, has assembled an impressive coalition of support for his Amendment 78. He secured the support of my noble friend Lady Brady, his friend the noble Baroness, Lady O’Grady of Upper Holloway, and the present Sports Minister, Stephanie Peacock. The Minister keeps reminding us of things that were said in the last Parliament and arguing that we should be bound by them, so I hope she will demand the same consistency from her honourable friend and will pay heed to the support that Amendment 78 has secured.

I think the noble Lord, Lord Watson, is right that this seems a clear and obvious lacuna in the Bill. I do not think we have had a professional footballer in your Lordships’ House. We have professional cricketers and Olympians and Paralympians, and we have noble Lords with interesting and considerable experience, but he has given voice to a group of people who have not yet been spoken up for in this Bill. Perhaps noble Lords can think of one. I cannot, so maybe it is a suggestion for his noble friend.

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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I am slightly embarrassed, but there has been a former professional footballer on the Labour Benches. He is now deceased. He was certainly here in the early 2000s. I shall find out his name.

Football Governance Bill [HL]

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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My Lords, the noble Lord, Lord Mann, is right that we have had extensive discussion on the issue of cost, but if there has been lengthy dialogue on this point then it is because the answers have not been forthcoming in the way that the Committee has wanted.

I am particularly grateful to my noble friend Lord Hayward, who is doing an invaluable service not just for this Committee but for the smaller clubs on whose behalf he has spoken this evening, and in the way that he has gone through the impact assessment to try to get to the bottom of the cost implications for them in particular. I am glad that he will continue to keep at this important point, and I hope he gets some better and more detailed answers from the Minister as he does so.

My noble friend mentioned a letter that the Minister had sent him. Again, she has been kind in responding in writing to individual points that noble Lords have raised, but I ask her to share those letters with the whole Committee when the team sends them through. I think they are coming through to the individual noble Lords who have raised those points but they are not always being shared, and it would be a benefit to the whole Committee if we could all see those letters when they come. However, I am grateful to her, as I know those noble Lords are, for the speed with which she is responding in writing to the points that they have raised.

I am grateful to my noble friends Lord Jackson of Peterborough and Lord Markham for tabling their amendments in this very important group, which concerns the state funding of the regulator. That is a big issue that is worthy of debate, and I support the way that they have drafted them. I put my name to my noble friend Lord Markham’s Amendments 171 and 253, but I am happy to associate myself with my noble friend Lord Jackson of Peterborough’s Amendment 50 as well, which was the one that began this group.

My noble friend’s amendment seeks to strip away the broad powers that could be granted to the Secretary of State to provide financial assistance to the independent football regulator as she sees fit, subject to conditions deemed appropriate by her. Amendment 50 from my noble friend is an important amendment in seeking to safeguard the integrity and independence of the independent football regulator. We would like to think that one of the core purposes of the new regulator is to serve as a neutral body overseeing the governance and financial management of football clubs in this country. By granting the Secretary of State the power to provide it with financial assistance, there is a real and present risk that the independent football regulator’s independence could be compromised.

As with any independent regulator, it is crucial that the independent football regulator operates free from any external pressures, particularly from the Government. The role of the regulator should be to assess the game on its own merits without any concern about political influence or the priorities of the Government of the day. If we were to allow the Government to fund the regulator, we would be introducing the potential for at least the appearance of government influence over the regulator’s work and its activities.

Even if that influence were not overt or immediate, the mere existence of government funding could lead to the perception, and possibly the reality, that the regulator would become beholden to future Governments. That is a danger we must seek to avoid, as it would erode the public’s trust in the new regulator, undermine its effectiveness and hamper its impartiality. The Government have rightly made much of the changes they have made to the Bill in order to guarantee the independence of the regulator in the eyes of international bodies that have paid attention to the Bill, so I am sure that is something they want to avoid in this instance as well.

I hope the Minister will agree that the provision as it stands is concerning in the way that it gives the Government the power to impose conditions on how the regulator uses its funds. The consequences of that are worth considering. The Government could impose restrictions or directives on the work of the regulator, such as mandating certain areas of focus or influencing the scope of its investigations. It could lead to the independent football regulator neglecting crucial issues or, even worse, aligning its work with the agenda of the Government of the day. That sort of shift would diminish the regulator’s ability to act in the best interests of football clubs, players, fans and the broader football ecosystem which the Government and all of us are mindful of protecting.

The existence of that sort of conditional funding could set a dangerous precedent for other regulatory bodies. If government assistance became contingent on adhering to political agendas or priorities, then the independence of other regulatory bodies could be called into question, further eroding public trust in oversight.

I would like also to support my noble friend Lord Markham’s amendments in this group, Amendments 171 and 253. Amendment 171 restricts discretionary licence conditions to include only “internal financial controls”. In Clause 22, the Government allow discretionary licence conditions to relate to “internal controls”. It is important that, in a Bill such as this, the Government recognise the details of the Bill and make clear that the provision refers to financial controls as opposed to solely internal ones.

As my noble friend set out, “internal controls” is broad and open to wide interpretation. Without his amendment, the regulator could potentially impose conditions that extend beyond the presumably intended focus on financial oversight. That surely creates a risk of the sort of regulatory overreach that the Committee has been very concerned about, whereby the regulator might intervene or interfere in areas unrelated to the core objectives of this Bill, such as operational decisions or non-financial activities within football clubs.

If we were to insert “financial” as my noble friend suggests, we would ensure that the discretionary licence conditions relating to internal controls are focused exclusively on financial governance. This refinement would make the regulator’s powers more precise, ensuring that its interventions are effective, proportionate and fully aligned with its mandate to oversee the financial health of football clubs. We have heard, repeatedly and rightly, that the financial sustainability of English football is what the Government are most concerned about and what has led to the Bill that is before the Committee.

The non-financial resources threshold requirement as outlined in the Bill is designed to ensure that clubs have adequate resources, financial and otherwise, to operate sustainably, but the specific mention of internal controls as part of this framework needs to be carefully defined to prevent unintended consequences. Without this amendment, the regulator could use its powers to impose conditions on internal controls that have little or no connection to financial matters. That could include operational areas such as staff management, logistical decisions or club culture, none of which falls under the regulator’s core responsibility to ensure financial sustainability.

By explicitly tying internal controls to financial matters, my noble friend’s amendment reinforces the Bill’s focus on financial governance, while respecting the operational independence of football clubs. They are of course complex organisations operating in—

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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I thank the noble Lord for giving way. I have bit my tongue for the last hour as I have watched the charade from the Benches opposite, all using up their entire allocation while interrupting each other, repeating themselves and slapping each other on the back. This is meant to be a debate. I raise it when the noble Lord is standing up not because I disagree with the fact that they are serious about what they are arguing. But had Mr Sunak waited until November and not called his election in July, the noble Lord, Lord Parkinson, would have been here with the same Bill in front of him, other than the issues that we heard have been changed so far—not the issues that we have been discussing for the last two hours or so. They would have been exactly the same. He would have been defending that Bill and now there is confected displeasure, if not outrage, with the way that the Bill is. Is that not hypocrisy?

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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I am happy to use the time before the Committee to return to this issue but, as my noble friends behind me have said repeatedly, and as I have agreed to each time they have, I know that they would have been raising these points with me had I been at the Dispatch Box opposite. I know that because they were already raising them with me when I had the privilege of being the Minister, and I would be in the position of seeking to persuade them of the merits of the Bill. But I have also been clear, from Second Reading and all the way through, that we want to see this regulator established. We want to see it doing its work and doing so effectively, but we also see before us a Bill that is different, because of the election that was called and the result that happened.

We are interrogating particularly closely the changes that the Government have made to the Bill, of which there are many, and we have more concerns on these Benches, from my colleagues behind me, than we did before the election about the way we do it. As I have said before, the result of the election also puts us in a position on this side of the House to fulfil the duty that the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, and the noble Baronesses, Lady Twycross and Lady Blake, dutifully fulfilled before the election: of making sure that government legislation is properly scrutinised. I make no apology for the fact that—

Football Governance Bill [HL]

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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My Lords, I support Amendments 182 to 184 in the names of my noble friends Lady Taylor and Lord Bassam. I do so, as my noble friend Lord Bassam said, specifically in relation to Wimbledon—not AFC Wimbledon, at which I happen to be a season ticket holder, but Wimbledon, the previous club, which has now been moved 60 miles up the M1 to Milton Keynes. I want to focus on the situation prior to that happening, and that is why these amendments are relevant.

Ironically, in one of the debates on the Bill last week I talked about state intervention and mentioned the Taylor report. It was that report, published in, I think, 1991, which said that our grounds at the top level must be all seated. Wimbledon’s ground was too small and too cramped, with houses round about it, for that to be done, so they moved from there to a ground share with Crystal Palace, ostensibly on a short-term basis—it turned out that they would be there for more than 10 years, but that is not really relevant to this. The point is that the owner eventually sold the ground from under the fans to a supermarket chain, and subsequently sold the club to Norwegian owners. The point is that the fans were nowhere consulted in any of this, although they made their views clear. But the point is that the home ground is key to any football club and there has to be the long-term commitment to that.

My noble friend Lord Bassam talked about going up to Milton Keynes. The previous owner of Wimbledon FC wanted to move it to Dublin. That was a serious proposal. Thankfully, it came to nothing, of course. On this issue of whether a club can move, that is why the regulator is important. It is maybe lost in the mists of time that, when Wimbledon FC were about to be moved, the FA and the Football League opposed it, and the FA, totally wrongly, set up a commission, which gave the club permission to move to Milton Keynes. It was famously said that retaining the club in Wimbledon would be

“not in the wider interests of football”.

Well, 25 years later, Wimbledon FC, now in Milton Keynes, gets crowds of about 6,000 and AFC Wimbledon, the new club, gets crowds of about 8,000—so noble Lords can work out what is in the wider interests of football from that.

My concern is about the commitment to the club’s ground. It is important that, unless we can get a long-term commitment for when ownership is going to change, there is no reason why any ground could not be sold off, with a new owner claiming, “Well, I’ve had such and such an offer from a supermarket chain, I can’t possibly turn it down. I’ll build a new ground some time in the future, but I don’t know when”. That is why the word “codified” in Amendment 182 is particularly important. It needs to be nailed down, because the importance of the home ground cannot be overstated in terms of the investment of fans into their football clubs.

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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My Lords, I am conscious that the noble Baroness, Lady Grey-Thompson, has not been able to be with us today to speak to her Amendments 187A and 187B; I know she has a commitment to chairing some Welsh sports bodies, which I know the Committee will understand and support. I just wanted to draw the Committee’s attention to the two amendments that she tabled, which have been grouped together with the others that we have debated here. As her explanatory statement sets out, they aim to provide a route for the regulator

“for other individuals and groups of people, who may have more inside knowledge than the average fan, to act as whistleblowers and raise any concerns they have about the suitability of an owner or officer”.

It is regrettable that the noble Baroness has not been able to be here to set out the case more fully, but I am sure that noble Lords will pay attention to that and consider those amendments as well.

Football Governance Bill [HL]

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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My Lords, I am grateful to my noble friends Lord Markham and Lord Maude of Horsham for speaking to their amendments and for setting out the case for them. Before the Minister responds to them and to my Amendment 7, which I moved at the outset, I should say that I am not precious about my amendment vis-à-vis those of my noble friends in this group, Amendments 12 and 13.

The noble Lord, Lord Watson of Invergowrie, said that he did not like my wording and found it rambling and insubstantial. I take no offence; I simply took the wording that the Government used in the Explanatory Notes and sought to put that in the Bill. If he finds that rambling, it may be that the Explanatory Notes are as well.

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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The point I was making was that the wording was appropriate for the Explanatory Notes but not for the Bill.

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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I thank the noble Lord. My noble friend Lord Hayward said that he did not much like it either, but it is helpful that my amendment has been grouped with the other amendments, which are seeking to give a bit more precision than the two short lines that are in the Bill. As I said in moving my amendment, my contention is that they do not go far enough to define what “sustainability” means in practice, which will be important for the regulator looking at it.

I am grateful to my noble friends, particularly my noble friend Lord Markham, whose Amendment 13 proposes a few tangible benchmarks through which sustainability can be measured. It suggests inserting criteria, including increasing TV viewership, increasing match attendance, improving international sporting competitiveness and increasing the overall income generated. They are all very tangible and specific. I hope that the noble Lord, Lord Watson, will prefer them and I look forward to hearing what the Minister has to say about them when she responds.

Criteria such as those would provide a far more accurate and reliable understanding of the sustainability of English football. As my noble friend Lord Markham said, we all want to make sure that we are helping to deliver that with this Bill and to give the regulator the clarity that it needs to uphold it. The Premier League’s television exports alone were worth £1.4 billion in 2019-20. If the Government are serious about growth and supporting the success of Great British success stories, the regulator must ensure that that growth trajectory goes only upwards. By basing the standards of sustainability on objective metrics, such as those that my noble friends Lord Markham and Lord Maude have tried to set out, football would surely benefit, and the regulator would have the clearer frames of reference that I think we are looking for.

As my noble friend Lord Hayward said, there is competition from a growing number of countries that are snapping at our heels. As the noble Lord, Lord Addington, reminded us, there is no divine right for football to continue to exist in the way that it does in this country. My noble friend Lord Hayward pointed out some of the sporting fixtures that have happened this weekend. I enjoyed the Qatar Grand Prix, although I thought that the 10-second penalty for Lando Norris was rather disproportionate, especially since no safety car and no virtual safety car were deployed. I mention that not to take us on to another sport but to point out the difficulties that happen when a regulator—in this case, the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile—makes curious or contentious decisions.

Through the amendments in this group, we are seeking to give a clarity of purpose to the regulator, so that it can focus its important work on delivering the sustainability of English football in a way that matches what the Government have set out in their Explanatory Notes. For all the differences that have been expressed, I think that we are all united on that. But it is important that we give this extra precision and clarity, and I look forward to hearing what the Minister has to say.

UEFA Euro 2020 Final

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Wednesday 30th November 2022

(2 years ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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I certainly echo the noble Baroness’s final comments—I see that she is sitting next to a noble Lord who might take a different view; diplomatically, I shall not intrude on that. She will be pleased to know that we continue to work with our international partners to ensure that we share the expertise that the police and other operational partners have in delivering major events. We had a good record of doing that this summer.

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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My Lords, as a Scot, I had no dog in the fight last night, but I none the less congratulate England on qualifying. Further to the point about alcohol at that final in July last year, a big issue also was supporters using cocaine, of which there was photographic evidence. Has the Minister had any discussions with the Football Association about ensuring that the use of such drugs is at the very least limited among those entering the stadium?

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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As I said, the Government have taken action to extend football banning orders to cover offences including the selling and taking of class A drugs at football games, which certainly had an effect on some of the disorder that we saw. We are taking forward action both as a Government and with policing partners.

BBC Funding

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Tuesday 25th January 2022

(2 years, 10 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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The noble Baroness will, I hope, appreciate that decisions on other departments’ areas and how the Government can help people with the cost of living are not for me. However, I hope I infer from her comments that she welcomes the decision that the Secretary of State has taken to do our bit to help people with the rising costs of what otherwise would have been a licence fee increase to £180 by 2027.

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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My Lords, the remarks of the noble Baroness, Lady Bottomley, and the noble Lord, Lord McNally, about the Secretary of State should perhaps be put in the context of the fact that she has a history of attacking the BBC, and her appointment to her current post was akin to giving a child the keys to the sweet shop.

Almost 80% of school-age children use BBC Bitesize, the UK’s only free-to-use comprehensive education resource portal as a regular part of their learning. During the Covid peaks, BBC lockdown learning attracted an average of four and a half million users to the online resources specially developed to support home schooling at a time when the Government were failing to provide enough laptops or broadband to disadvantaged families. No commercial broadcaster would provide these services gratis. Has any assessment been made of the impact of the licence fee freeze on the BBC’s education output?

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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I agree with the noble Lord that the services provided by BBC Bitesize and more widely were a lifeline to people including those who were home schooling during lockdown, as I said to the noble Baroness, Lady Bonham-Carter. However, I point to the comments of my right honourable friend the Secretary of state in another place when she made this Statement. She was very glad to defend the BBC and to say that she wanted it to continue to thrive for another 100 years. That is why we want to have the open discussion that we need to make sure that its funding model can sustain it in a changing landscape; that is important and, as I have said, I look forward to having that debate with noble Lords.

UCAS End of Cycle Report 2019

Debate between Lord Watson of Invergowrie and Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay
Tuesday 8th September 2020

(4 years, 3 months ago)

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Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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The noble Lord is absolutely right to point out the important work done by teachers in raising aspirations and encouraging pupils. I know that as a comprehensive schoolboy who went to Oxbridge. Part of our reforms has been about giving more autonomy to school leaders so that they can follow the evidence and do what is best to raise standards in our schools and help people go as far as their talents can carry them.

Lord Watson of Invergowrie Portrait Lord Watson of Invergowrie (Lab)
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My Lords, the admissions system has barely changed since I was one of just 10% of school leavers to go to university in 1970. It is now nearly 50%, yet it is assumed that largely the same system is still fit for purpose. Palpably it is not, and one thing that must change is the introduction of post-qualification applications and an end to the corrupted system of unconditional offers of places. In Scotland there is an aim for 20% of all entrants to higher education to come from the 20% most deprived backgrounds by 2030. In light of the UCAS report, can the Minister say why in England there are no targets for the involvement of white students from lower socioeconomic groups and when the Government plan to introduce them?

Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay Portrait Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay (Con)
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My Lords, there are no national targets, but all higher education providers that want to charge higher-level fees need to have an access and participation plan agreed by the Office for Students. As part of those plans, they set the activities and targets to support students from disadvantaged backgrounds going to their institutions. If a provider fails to meet its access and participation plan, the OfS can hold it to account, while respecting its academic freedom and institutional autonomy.