UK national lottery review to give public more say in how funds are spent
The UK government is launching a 12-week consultation to review the future of the National Lottery for the first time in over two decades. Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy announced the initiative, aiming to give the public a greater say in how the billions raised from ticket sales are spent.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe UK government is launching a 12-week consultation to review the future of the National Lottery for the first time in over two decades. Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy announced the initiative, aiming to give the public a greater say in how the billions raised from ticket sales are spent. The consultation will examine the distribution of lottery funds, which have supported good causes since 1994. Nandy emphasized that the money is "the public's money" and that communities should have more influence over its allocation, particularly to benefit smaller, grassroots organizations. This review seeks to address concerns that decisions have historically favored larger entities and been made distant from the communities they serve.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedAllwyn, owned by Czech billionaire Karel Komárek, won the 10-year licence to operate the franchise after Camelot.
The national lottery has collected more than £53bn for good causes since 1994.
The public will be given a greater say in how billions of pounds raised by ticket sales is spent.
The government is to review the future of the national lottery for the first time in more than 20 years.