In the 18 months since plans for an independent football regulator were first confirmed, the Premier League has provided gifts to MPs worth more than they did in the previous ten years put together, Byline Times can reveal.
The findings have sparked further "disbelief" over PM Keir Starmer appearing to dismiss conflict of interest claims.
Keir Starmer has sidestepped criticism over accepting £35,000 of free tickets from football clubs, suggesting it saves the taxpayer money on security. Safety concerns mean the Prime Minister can no longer watch games from the stands, he told the BBC.
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The PM has been riding a wave of bad press for receiving more than £100,000 of freebies and gifts over the last parliament, something the Conservatives became infamous for during their time in power. Starmer has also accepted £32,000 worth of clothes from the Labour donor Lord Alli along with the use of two of his luxury flats.
But now Byline Times can reveal the full scale of Premier League lobbying of MPs, and how it's been ramped up as a change of Government appeared likely.
Since entering government, Labour has reintroduced a bill to establish an independent football regulator (IFR), which the Premier League CEO Richard Masters has warned could risk "[undermining] the Premier League's global success".
A Byline Times analysis of 12 years of the Register of MPs' Interests appears to show an acceleration of generosity from the Premier League since the Conservatives first announced plans for the IFR.
Related reading: 'Keir Starmer is Playing Right Into his Political Opponents' Hands'
By 23 February 2023, when a White Paper with proposals to reform the sport's governance was published, the Premier League had given MPs tickets and hospitality to the value of £47,089 since February 2013.
Since that date, MPs have declared £47,736 worth (£647 more) of gifts from the Premier League, £31,855 of which has been to Labour MPs.
On the same evening as the White Paper's publication, Labour MP Jonathan Reynolds, who recently told Times Radio accepting hospitality was "not a perk of the job, it's part of the job" attended Manchester United vs Barcelona with £1,000 worth of tickets and hospitality paid for by the Premier League.
Since then, Starmer has been the largest beneficiary of gifts from the Premier League, accepting five tickets to Arsenal vs Porto and four tickets to Taylor Swift, worth £7,000.
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Analysis of the nature of gifts declared also shows an increasing shift from just football towards wider sports and entertainment hospitality tickets in the wake of the White Paper. This includes 14 of the 28 Taylor Swift tickets for which many Labour MPs have come under fire for taking. It also includes five Labour MPs, including senior figures Liz Kendall and Pat McFadden, being given hospitality passes to attend this year's Brit Awards, worth £8,500.
Peter Geoghegan, author of Democracy for Sale told Byline Times "The Premier League has been a vocal lobbyist against a football regulator" making it "all the more inappropriate that members of what is now the party of Government have accepted so many free gifts from them.
The conflicts of interest here are so apparent that it's mystifying that Starmer and his colleagues seem incapable of seeing them
Peter Geoghegan, author Democracy for Sale
Responding to other reports of football sector freebies, Conservative MP, Ben Obese-Jecty, told The Guardian: "In light of this, the decisions [Keir Starmer] takes on football governance should receive 'forensic' scrutiny."
Starmer, the newspaper noted, has also accepted free football tickets from businesses such as construction firm Mulalley and Co - a