American politicians have hit out at the PGA Tour deal with the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (PIF), with one saying they are “sickened” and others labelling it as a “sellout” and a blatant attempt to “sportswash” by the Saudis.
The US Justice Department is already reportedly looking into the proposed deal, in the context of the antitrust lawsuits filed by both parties before PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and PIF boss Yasir Al-Rumayyan joined forces.
As many thought, the deal may not go through smoothly and politicians on Capitol Hill have weighed in strongly with criticism raining down on the PGA Tour for making such a deal.
Congressman John Garamendi has introduced a bill called the “No Corporate Tax Exemption for Professional Sports Act” and had some powerful words against both the PGA Tour and Saudi investors.
“Saudi Arabia cannot be allowed to ‘sportswash’ its government’s horrific human rights abuses, and the 2018 murder of American-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi, by taking over the PGA,” Garamendi said in a statement published by Yahoo Sports.
“PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan should be ashamed of the blatant hypocrisy and about-face he and the rest of PGA’s leadership demonstrated by allowing the sovereign wealth fund of a foreign government with an unconscionable human rights record to take over an iconic American sports league and avoid paying a penny in federal corporate income tax.
“This merger flies in the face of the PGA players who turned down hundred-million-dollar paydays from the Saudi-backed LIV to align themselves with the right side of history and human decency.”
And the criticism didn’t stop there, with Senator Richard Blumenthal calling the deal “blatant sportswashing” and also adding Monahan should be ashamed: “I am disappointed and even outraged by the PGA’s sellout,” he said. “The PGA ought to be ashamed, and it’s leadership, frankly, has lost all credibility, certainly all moral authority.”
Senator Tim Kaine went a step further as he also voiced his disappointment that the PGA Tour decided to take the Saudi investment: “I was really sickened by it. I thought the PGA was taking a principled stand,” Senator Kaine told Fox News.
“When I saw the news yesterday, I was really disappointed because it seems they set aside all the human rights objections that they had and just decided ‘okay, well, we can make more money if we go a different direction.'”
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