UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s latest Treasury appointments have set alarm bells ringing across Britain’s gambling sector, with key personnel changes pointing toward significant tax reforms that could reshape the industry’s financial landscape.
Strategic Appointments Signal Policy Shift
The reshuffle places Darren Jones in a senior UK Treasury role reporting directly to the Prime Minister—a structural change that consolidates budget control at the highest level. James Murray takes over Jones’s previous position, bringing his track record of modernizing HMRC (the UK’s tax authority) and vocal support for corporation tax increases.
The promotion of Dan Tomlinson to Exchequer Secretary—a senior Treasury minister position—represents perhaps the clearest signal of the UK government’s tax intentions. Tomlinson’s background at the Resolution Foundation, a British economic think tank where he co-authored the influential Ending Stagnation Report, positions him as a key architect of the administration’s economic strategy. The report explicitly calls for tax reform even amid promises of cuts—a contradiction that has industry observers on edge.
Unlikely Industry Connection
A curious twist emerges through Tim Allan, Starmer’s new communications chief, whose previous role at Portland communications agency included British bookmaker William Hill among major clients. Allan’s diverse portfolio also encompassed work for Qatar and the Russian government, bringing unexpected gambling sector experience to Downing Street’s inner circle.
Radical Tax System Overhaul Proposed
The UK government is consulting on merging Remote Gaming Duty, General Betting Duty, and Pool Betting Duty into a single Remote Betting and Gaming Duty (RBGD). This consolidation targets the online gambling sector’s market dominance—£6.9 billion ($8.7 billion) in gross gambling yield representing 44% of Britain’s total gambling market.
Current Remote Gaming Duty applies a 21% rate on gross profits for online slots, poker, bingo, and games, calculated on a place-of-consumption basis—meaning taxes are levied where customers gamble rather than where operators are based.
Murray champions the changes as necessary modernization: “The tax system needs to keep pace with developments and innovation that have seen the UK-facing remote gambling sector change significantly in recent years. A single duty will provide tax certainty and increase simplification for remote gambling.”
Industry Resistance Intensifies
Grainne Hurst, CEO of the Betting and Gaming Council (the UK gambling industry’s main trade body), has launched a fierce counterattack against potential tax increases. She labels raising taxes through the new single duty as “utterly self-defeating,” warning of economic damage to a thriving sector.
Her defense cites substantial economic contribution: “BGC members contribute £6.8bn to the UK economy, generate £4bn in tax while supporting 109,000 jobs, but this flawed approach can only lead to a spiral of decline. The government must listen to business and sport and not drive growth, investment and jobs out of one of the UK’s few global business success stories.”
Reform vs. Revenue Tension
The philosophical tension at the heart of UK government policy centers on Tomlinson’s Ending Stagnation Report, which advocates tax reform over simple rate increases. However, with British public spending pressures mounting and previous tax cut commitments on record, the gambling industry faces uncertainty about whether “reform” will translate to higher effective rates under the consolidated system.
As the UK budget approaches, the combination of personnel appointments and proposed structural changes suggests Britain’s gambling sector tax burden could increase substantially, despite government rhetoric about simplification and modernization.