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Tories to overhaul lotto

Tom Quinn

Published 24 June 2008

A Conservative government would overhaul the way lotto funds are distributed, Shadow Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt tells newstatesman.com

The National Lottery faces a radical overhaul if the Tories win power at the next election with proceeds from games to be funnelled directly into the arts, sport, heritage and charities, Shadow Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt has told newstatesman.com.

“The Labour Party has been treating the lottery like its own personal piggy bank, using it to fund pet projects that are clearly areas of government responsibility,” said Hunt. “The result is that less and less money is going into the arts.”

Although Hunt applauds Labour for placing the arts at the heart of the domestic policy discussion he argues Labour's mismanagement of lottery funds mean “the Conservative Party is now the natural party for the arts”.

He argues that since 1998, Labour's habit of haphazardly spending money brought in by the lottery - including allocating more than £200 million for administrative costs and another £50,000 on in-house surveys to determine whether lotto employees are happy - has diverted nearly £4 billion away from the original core “good causes” of the arts, sport, heritage and charities.

He says that, to their credit, Labour has tried to compensate by increasing the amount of direct government spend in these areas, but have still fallen woefully short in their efforts. The arts, for example, has seen its net funding cut by more than £300 million.

“If we stop using spending lottery funds on administrative and overhead costs, that alone could generate another £50 million for the arts,” said Hunt.

While some might challenge the need to subsidise the arts, when there are so many other worthwhile causes, Hunt insists their importance cannot be overstated.

“We should always be worrying about the arts,” said Hunt. “They give people a better understanding of where we've come from, and they are an essential part of understanding where we are now.”

Furthermore, Hunt sees the arts as a means by which the United Kingdom can create a heterogeneous yet solid national identity from the hodgepodge of ethnicities and religions that have become an integral part of British society.

“I think a lot of people in government have this totally false belief that the minorities that have come to Britain are only interested in the countries they left,” said Hunt. I think many of them are very interested in British art and culture. We need to be positive in promoting British culture and history, both the good and the bad, and not be embarrassed of it.”

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2 comments from readers

Carl Jones
24 June 2008 at 17:48

I must admit that lottery funding parts of the NHS is criminal.

Wembley Stadium received £120 million in lottery funds, another criminal act when you consider the money sloshing around in English football.

There is a lot of highbrow art which should be funding themselves. Just because its been around for a long time does not mean it should survive forever.

I`d love to know what British culture is. In most European countries, their culture is everywhere, I don`t see much that can be called British, or English....maybe the War on Terror would qualify, or drunken fighting followed by bouts of puking. We work such long hours and live in such a hostile society that most people stay at home...thank God Top Gear is back.lol

gnuneo
15 July 2008 at 21:31

so we should start investing in 'british culture' propoganda movies to 'educate' the british people who they should be?

i think we can all imagine what will come from the kind of "art" would come of this...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ivsb79-h90

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQWPR9TM0Gk&

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjxY9rZwNGU

investing in art yes, investing in such blatant propogandising by social-control politicians is not. IMHO.

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