Actors' Union Equity Slams Culture Secretary Sajid Javid Over Ticket Touts

Actors Lash Out At Javid's 'Simply Wrong' Ticket Tout Support
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The new Culture Secretary Sajid Javid pictured in Downing Street today. He replaces Maria Miller who resigned from the post after an expenses row.
Jeff Moore/Jeff Moore

Culture secretary Sajid Javid is facing a growing backlash among arts groups as actors' trade union Equity criticised him for praising ticket touts as "classic entrepreneurs" who should be able to charge however much they want.

Equity's assistant general secretary Martin Brown told HuffPostUK: “Ticket touts are modern-day spivs. The price of West End show tickets is already fairly high, get one from a tout and you will pay through the nose – none of that extra gets anywhere near the actors or anyone else who has worked hard to put the show on.

"Tickets to shows at subsidised theatres are low because tax payers’ money goes to keeping them low. Why should ticket touts get a benefit from charging over the odds? Sajid Javid is simply wrong on this and I look forward to meeting him so that I can put the arguments to him directly.”

Willy Donaghy, senior official for the arts and entertainment of media trade union BECTU, said: “We disagree profoundly with the new Culture Minister on the issue of ticket touts. In our view they are economic parasites who contribute nothing whatsoever to the creation and staging of new arts events.

"By creaming off billions of pounds from the pool of private money available for spending on culture, touts are depriving the arts sector of badly-needed income at a time when public funding is in steep decline. They could help to kill off parts of the industry that is currently providing their ill-gotten gains.”

Touts are offering tickets online to Kate Bush's comeback gigs for as high as £2,500 each, while pairs of tickets for this Sunday's sold-out Premier League match between Manchester City and Liverpool are on sale for up to £5,000.

Equity joins a growing chorus of arts organisations including the Royal Opera House and the Concert Promoters' Association who have expressed concern about Javid's praise for ticket touts.

Javid, who was made culture secretary on Wednesday after Maria Miller resigned amid a row over her expenses, said in 2011: "Ticket resellers act like classic entrepreneurs, because they fill a gap in the market that they have identified."

"They provide a service that can help people who did not obtain a supply of tickets in the original sale to purchase them for sporting and cultural events. As long as those tickets have been acquired genuinely and lawfully, it is an honest transaction, and there should be no Government restriction on someone's ability to sell them."

He dismissed a Labour MP's concerns about touts' high prices as those of the "chattering middle classes and champagne socialists", adding that "they are providing a service that deserves to be rewarded".

A spokesman for the Football Supporters' Federation said: "Football tickets are expensive enough without clubs allowing a third party to get between fan and club, especially one which has no objective other than to get their hands on fans' money."

Tory MP Mike Weatherley, who is co-chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Ticket Abuse, which has been looking into the touting of tickets, said: "It's my job now to show him that he is wrong on this subject!

"Sajid is a very capable person who I am sure will respond to sound argument. Once our report is published, I will be seeking an early meeting with him."

He wrote on HuffPostUK: "Perhaps you're mad keen on culture. Perhaps in between making all that money, you were hanging around galleries, theatres, cinemas, concert halls, comedy clubs, libraries, dance studios, painting classes. Perhaps you've seen how people manage on a shoe string, perhaps you've seen the awful conditions backstage in many theatres, perhaps you know about the crap wages that most people in the arts work with. Perhaps you know about the terrible crisis we have in libraries, depriving people of access to knowledge and culture."

"If you do, you'll know it's a very, very different world from the outrageous, lavish, crazy world you lived in while you were at Chase Manhattan and Deutsche Banks."

10 things you need to know about Sajid Javid, Maria Miller's replacement
Sajid Javid became MP after an expenses scandal (01 of10)
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Javid won his Bromsgrove seat, replacing Julie Kirkbride, who had to step down over her own expenses scandal. And now another expenses scandal sees Javid rise up into the cabinet.
Sajid has had his own "women problem"(02 of10)
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Javid suggested that had come about as women did not "merit" being on the all-male Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee in March, just as his boss George Osborne was battling accusations of a "women problem". He is now equalities minister.
Sajid owes his rise to George Osborne(03 of10)
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Javid rose up the government ranks as one of Osborne's right-hand man. He served first as his ministerial aide, becoming economic secretary and then financial secretary at the Treasury.
Sajid is a former banker who made millions(04 of10)
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Javid worked for Chase Manhattan Bank in the US, becoming the youngest vice-president in bank's history at the age of 25. He was then headhunted by Deutsche Bank. Javid is reported to have made £20 million during his time in the City.
Deutsche Bank has recently been fined...(05 of10)
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Deutsche Bank was recently fined by the European Commission for colluding with four other banks and a brokerage firm to fix Yen Libor and Euribor benchmark rates. Their investigation focused on the period of Septemnber 2005 and May 2008. Questions have been raised as Javid held senior positions at Deutsche Bank during this period.
Sajid has been a Thatcherite since the age of 11(06 of10)
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Javid has a portrait of Margaret Thatcher up in his office and confesses to having been a fan of the Iron Lady since the age of 11.He explained: "I instinctively thought, “I really admire this woman”. My dad lived through the winter of discontent and used to vote Labour, but switched to Thatcher, saying, “look how she’s sorting out the country”. I agreed."
Sajid owns four houses (07 of10)
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Javid has a £4million home in Fulham, a £2million pad which he rents out in Chelsea, a third in Bristol and a fourth in his constituency of Bromsgrove.
Sajid is a non-practising Muslim (08 of10)
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Javid will be the coalition's first male Muslim cabinet minister. Although proud of his Muslim background, Javid admitted in an interview that he wasn't practising and so didn't observe events like Ramadan. Javid said he didn't read the Koran, explaining: "But how many people call themselves Christian and visit a church? God and Allah are the same thing.’
Sajid is the son of a bus driver(09 of10)
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His father, Abdul, came to Britain from Pakistan in 1961 with just £1 in his pocket, going on to settle in Rochdale.Abdul worked all hours as a bus driver, earning him the nickname "Mr Night and Day".
Sajid has his opinions on foreign policy(10 of10)
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Javid recently suggested that there was a "direct link" between Ed Miliband's refusal to back military action in Syria with Russia choosing to invade Crimea, in a claim other Tory MPs dismissed as "utter nonsense".