Farage is worried a proposed gambling tax raid by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her Budget this month could price them out of existence
ARMED with a tub of two-pence pieces on Clacton Pier, Nigel Farageâs eyes light up as he approaches the slot machines.
âI love a bet,â the architect of Brexit tells me. âIâm a self-confessed gambler, but not a problem one.
âRemember, I was a commodities trader in the City. I love the horses.â
Farage proudly says that he returned from his annual trip to the Cheltenham Gold Cup in March with âhis pocket a lot thicker than when I went inâ.
The Reform UK leader placed âa grandâ on Leave to win the 2016 EU referendum when it was 4-1 against.
And he âdid quite wellâ gambling on Donald Trump taking the White House that same year.
But today, he cites the humble tuppenny coin push and ÂŁ1 slot machines on Clactonâs Pier in Essex as the reasons why he is backing The Sunâs Save Our Bets campaign.
Farage is worried a proposed gambling tax raid by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her Budget this month could price them out of existence.
âThese seaside arcades are part of our cultural heritage and theyâre fun,â says the man who is currently bookiesâ favourite to be the next Prime Minister after Sir Keir Starmer.
âIâve had just about enough of the modern-day Cromwellian puritans deciding how we should enjoy ourselves.
âWhat gets forgotten with gambling and alcohol is that the vast majority of people use these things perfectly responsibly.â
Rite of passage
Clactonâs famous pier opened in 1871 and is the beating heart of Farageâs seaside constituency.
Gesturing at the teeming family arcade, he adds: âThere are kids putting tuppences in machines, having fun and making memories that will last them for the rest of their lives.
âIf they increase tax on these machines, this place may close and the country would be all the poorer for it. So Iâm 100 per cent behind The Sunâs Save Our Bets campaign. It matters.â
Sticking a few coppers in the coin-pushers at a rain-lashed seaside resort is something of a rite of passage for British children.
And the pier in Clacton, almost 80 miles north east of London, has remained a year-round draw.
The slots here are a vital part of the 6.5-acre entertainment package, which also includes a funfair, 18-hole adventure golf course and cinematic 4D dinosaurs.
But the pierâs owners, Billy and Elliot Ball, say a swingeing tax rise could ruin their family business.
I love a bet. Iâm a self-confessed gambler, but not a problem one
Nigel Farage
They already shell out up to ÂŁ400,000 a year on energy bills and have been hammered by last yearâs National Insurance hike.
Director Billy, 44, said: âThis proposed tax rise could be catastrophic.
âAlmost every seaside pier in the country relies on amusement arcade revenue to make it sustainable.
âYou increase the tax on gaming machines and, for many, itâs lights off â we lose these heritage assets.â
Currently, Machine Games Duty is five per cent for slots where the stake is under 20p.
On machines where you can wager up to ÂŁ5, it is 20 per cent, and for those taking stakes above that, it is 25 per cent.
Left-wing think tank the Institute For Public Policy Research has proposed raising the 20 per cent duty to 50 per cent.
Crucially, the levy is paid on total stake money minus winnings, rather than company profit.
And with the legal per-play stake for a ÂŁ100 jackpot slot machine kept at ÂŁ1 since 2014, arcade owners have little room to recoup tax hikes.
In Clacton, the Balls employ 230 people at their August peak, and 150 all year round.
Billy added: âNot everything we do is about profit â itâs a labour of love. But it gets to a point where this is not sustainable.â
Joseph Cullis, President of the British Amusement Catering Trade Association, said the proposed 50 per cent tax hike would âwipe the industry out overnightâ.
Rather than being kicked in the nuts the whole time, a little bit of help from the Government for the guys that run it might be good
Nigel Farage
Joseph, whose family firm runs arcades in Ayrshire and Dumfries and Galloway, added: âWe estimate that even a small increase on the 20 per cent rate to 25 per cent would see up to a third of venues close.
âOur industry employs 15,000 people. A lot of livelihoods are under threat â and itâs not just the seaside.
âPubs and working menâs clubs have gaming machines, too, and they rely on their income to keep going.â
Meanwhile, Farage, in a tweed jacket and maroon trousers, is grinning mischievously after picking up a cascade of two pennies he has won on the coin-pusher machine.
He says: âThe pier and its arcade is a big part of what this town is.
âRather than being kicked in the nuts the whole time, a little bit of help from the Government for the guys that run it might be good.â
And if youâre asking me, âIs it right the bookmakers have got me as favourite?â, I think it probably is
Nigel Farage
Punters are also backing The Sunâs campaign against the Chancellorâs proposed tax increase.
Outside Wetherspoonâs on the prom, we chat to care home worker Victor Camilleri, 57, who likes a flutter.
He said: âIâm all for Save Our Bets. We all pay enough tax anyway.â And playing slots on the pier, Graham Williams, 43, added: âI limit myself to a fiver on these machines. Itâs just a bit of fun.
âTo try and get more tax from slot machines where people bet a few pence is wrong.â
Last week, Jaywick, a neighbourhood in Farageâs constituency, was named Britainâs most deprived area for a fourth year in a row.
âAll the markers are slightly better and employment figures are up there,â he tells me.
âBut I shudder to think what happens to Clacton without tourism.â
Before he leaves, I ask Farage if he is worth a punt to be the next PM after Sir Keir Starmer.
Heâs currently the 7-2 favourite with Ladbrokes.
âWeâve had an amazing 15 months, a tremendous run,â he tells me with a smile.
âAnd if youâre asking me, âIs it right the bookmakers have got me as favourite?â, I think it probably is.â







