Our telephone lines are momentarily unavailable however all our consultants are reachable via email and mobile.
We apologise for the inconvenience; this should be resolved within 5-7 working days.

Hyperion Blog

24
May
2010

Logo_ladbrokes

Another leading bookmaker has joined critics of the government's plan to tax online and telephone betting.

Joe Lewins, managing director of Ladbrokes Ireland, said the tax wouldn't drag in the online gaming firms the government was targeting.

Taoiseach Brian Cowen said in a speech this month that the government plans to get all gaming firms taking bets from Irish customers into the tax net in a bid to end state subsidies for horse racing.

Lewins said deterrents to stop companies offering online gaming, such as blocking IP addresses, failed to work in other countries. He also said raising the betting levy wouldn't produce a "golden egg" to support horseracing.

"There is a very simple solution. I can't understand why we can't have extended betting hours. Come September you are driving everything online because you are screwing the betting shops by closing early," Lewins said.

Last week Paddy Power chief Patrick Kennedy said increasing the betting levy would only hit his company and Boylesports as most other betting firms were offshore.

Source: www.tribune.ie

Hyperion - for all of your iGaming recruitment requirements.

Close X

Share this story

Share with third party communities This will take you to a new window.

Comments

Add a comment to this entry