My Lords, I rise to move Amendment 295A and to speak to my other amendments, 297A through 297G. While I have, of course, had expert help in the drafting, the approach in these amendments is entirely my own. They are my response to discussions I have had within football and right across this House about the single most radical measure in the Bill: the process for determining fund flow down the football pyramid.
I have already made clear my conviction that the precious and unparalleled role that football clubs play in their communities justifies regulation. Fans should be listened to, and they deserve protection from the occasionally bad, if generally well-intentioned, stewardship of owners and management who take ill-considered risks and lose control of their finances—the overwhelming reason why clubs fail and falter.
I wholeheartedly welcome the provisions in the Bill for promoting good and prudent management. They should have a major and beneficial—indeed, radical—impact on English football. I believe, however, that the precise mechanism set out in the Bill for determining fund flow carries severe risk and could adversely impact the whole of the English game. I note the cogent reservations about the mechanism set out in the EFL’s own briefing paper from last November. I note, too, that the Bill’s progenitor, Dame Tracey Crouch, described the backstop mechanism as the “nuclear equivalent for football.” She observed, quite rightly, that in a nuclear conflict, he who pulls the trigger may not be the winner.
The backstop is an inappropriate measure to resolve issues between two groups who live cheek by jowl and whose membership is interchangeable every 12 months. Next year, any club might find itself sitting on the other side of the table. The essential task of establishing an appropriate flow of funds down the leagues is to balance two public goods, and “balance” is the key word: on the one hand, to maintain the extraordinary success of the Premier League; and on the other, to share sufficient of the fruits of the Premier League’s success to encourage the healthy operation of the whole of the football pyramid and to ensure that any well-managed club can rise to the very top.