Members of the House of Lords have proposed 375 amendments to the legislation, many of which may require lengthy consultation and could take years to resolve
There is a round of Premier League fixtures this midweek but, all the same, the powerbrokers of English football will have one eye on the House of Lords on Wednesday. The debate over an independent regulator for the game has heated up again after it appeared to be done and dusted; what once commanded cross-party support is starting to look, ahem, like a political football.
In the weeks leading up to Christmas a series of lengthy debates were held in the Lords over the Football Governance Bill and its provisions. A remarkable 375 amendments were proposed, addressing everything from state ownership of clubs to replacing use of the word crest with badge “to avoid the incorrect use of heraldic terms”.
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