Well what do you think?E-petition: Response from the Prime Minister
The e-petition to "scrap the proposed introduction of ID cards" has now closed. The petition stated that "The introduction of ID cards will not prevent terrorism or crime, as is claimed. It will be yet another indirect tax on all law-abiding citizens of the UK". This is a response from the Prime Minister, Tony Blair.
The petition calling for the Government to abandon plans for a National ID Scheme attracted almost 28,000 signatures - one of the largest responses since this e-petition service was set up. So I thought I would reply personally to those who signed up, to explain why the Government believes National ID cards, and the National Identity Register needed to make them effective, will help make Britain a safer place.
The petition disputes the idea that ID cards will help reduce crime or terrorism. While I certainly accept that ID cards will not prevent all terrorist outrages or crime, I believe they will make an important contribution to making our borders more secure, countering fraud, and tackling international crime and terrorism. More importantly, this is also what our security services - who have the task of protecting this country - believe.
So I would like to explain why I think it would be foolish to ignore the opportunity to use biometrics such as fingerprints to secure our identities. I would also like to discuss some of the claims about costs - particularly the way the cost of an ID card is often inflated by including in estimates the cost of a biometric passport which, it seems certain, all those who want to travel abroad will soon need.
In contrast to these exaggerated figures, the real benefits for our country and its citizens from ID cards and the National Identity Register, which will contain less information on individuals than the data collected by the average store card, should be delivered for a cost of around £3 a year over its ten-year life.
But first, it's important to set out why we need to do more to secure our identities and how I believe ID cards will help. We live in a world in which people, money and information are more mobile than ever before. Terrorists and international criminal gangs increasingly exploit this to move undetected across borders and to disappear within countries. Terrorists routinely use multiple identities - up to 50 at a time. Indeed this is an essential part of the way they operate and is specifically taught at Al-Qaeda training camps. One in four criminals also uses a false identity. ID cards which contain biometric recognition details and which are linked to a National Identity Register will make this much more difficult.
Secure identities will also help us counter the fast-growing problem of identity fraud. This already costs £1.7 billion annually. There is no doubt that building yourself a new and false identity is all too easy at the moment. Forging an ID card and matching biometric record will be much harder.
I also believe that the National Identity Register will help police bring those guilty of serious crimes to justice. They will be able, for example, to compare the fingerprints found at the scene of some 900,000 unsolved crimes against the information held on the register. Another benefit from biometric technology will be to improve the flow of information between countries on the identity of offenders.
The National Identity Register will also help improve protection for the vulnerable, enabling more effective and quicker checks on those seeking to work, for example, with children. It should make it much more difficult, as has happened tragically in the past, for people to slip through the net.
Proper identity management and ID cards also have an important role to play in preventing illegal immigration and illegal working. The effectiveness on the new biometric technology is, in fact, already being seen. In trials using this technology on visa applications at just nine overseas posts, our officials have already uncovered 1,400 people trying illegally to get back into the UK.
Nor is Britain alone in believing that biometrics offer a massive opportunity to secure our identities. Firms across the world are already using fingerprint or iris recognition for their staff. France, Italy and Spain are among other European countries already planning to add biometrics to their ID cards. Over 50 countries across the world are developing biometric passports, and all EU countries are proposing to include fingerprint biometrics on their passports. The introduction in 2006 of British e-passports incorporating facial image biometrics has meant that British passport holders can continue to visit the United States without a visa. What the National Identity Scheme does is take this opportunity to ensure we maximise the benefits to the UK.
These then are the ways I believe ID cards can help cut crime and terrorism. I recognise that these arguments will not convince those who oppose a National Identity Scheme on civil liberty grounds. They will, I hope, be reassured by the strict safeguards now in place on the data held on the register and the right for each individual to check it. But I hope it might make those who believe ID cards will be ineffective reconsider their opposition.
If national ID cards do help us counter crime and terrorism, it is, of course, the law-abiding majority who will benefit and whose own liberties will be protected. This helps explain why, according to the recent authoritative Social Attitudes survey, the majority of people favour compulsory ID cards.
I am also convinced that there will also be other positive benefits. A national ID card system, for example, will prevent the need, as now, to take a whole range of documents to establish our identity. Over time, they will also help improve access to services.
The petition also talks about cost. It is true that individuals will have to pay a fee to meet the cost of their ID card in the same way, for example, as they now do for their passports. But I simply don't recognise most claims of the cost of ID cards. In many cases, these estimates deliberately exaggerate the cost of ID cards by adding in the cost of biometric passports. This is both unfair and inaccurate.
As I have said, it is clear that if we want to travel abroad, we will soon have no choice but to have a biometric passport. We estimate that the cost of biometric passports will account for 70% of the cost of the combined passports/id cards. The additional cost of the ID cards is expected to be less than £30 or £3 a year for their 10-year lifespan. Our aim is to ensure we also make the most of the benefits these biometric advances bring within our borders and in our everyday lives.
Yours sincerely,
Tony Blair
Useful links
10 Downing Street home page
http://www.pm.gov.uk/
James Hall, the official in charge of delivering the ID card scheme, will be answering questions on line on 5th March. You can put your question to him here http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page10969.asp
To see his last web chat in November 2006, see: http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page10364.asp
Identity and Passport Service
http://www.ips.gov.uk/
Home Office Identity Fraud Steering Committee
http://www.identity-theft.org.uk/
Identity cards
Moderators: Aladinsaneuk, MartDude, D-Rider, Moderators
Identity cards
Received an email today from the 10 Downing Street petitions web site. Its from (supposedly Tony Blair)
Well, I for one don't want an ID card and I don't want a biometric passport!
The creeping Big Brother state is growing ever more powerful - cameras spying on you everywhere, mobile phones used to track your movements ANPR again tracking movements.
Orwell would not have believed the state we've let ourselves get talked into 'for our own good and security'.
While we have a benign government, things will not be too bad (although one does have to ask 'how benign'? when they push forward with their thirst for surveilance of the average citizen). However, what happens one day when the government is not benign ... as must surely be a likely scenario? The facilities and systems that are already in place for them are truly frightening.
These things HAVE to be fought for the good of the citizens and future citizens of this nation.
The creeping Big Brother state is growing ever more powerful - cameras spying on you everywhere, mobile phones used to track your movements ANPR again tracking movements.
Orwell would not have believed the state we've let ourselves get talked into 'for our own good and security'.
While we have a benign government, things will not be too bad (although one does have to ask 'how benign'? when they push forward with their thirst for surveilance of the average citizen). However, what happens one day when the government is not benign ... as must surely be a likely scenario? The facilities and systems that are already in place for them are truly frightening.
These things HAVE to be fought for the good of the citizens and future citizens of this nation.
- Falcoholic
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If they hadn't turned over Iraq and they would leave the defenceless states alone and stop being a puppet for Dubya and his entourage then we wouldn't have any terrorist threat to speak of.
They (and the Yanks) are all trying to convince us to be scared so that they can implement the Imperial Grand Strategy and they're penchant for "Preventative" war.
F**k em all I say!
The world's second biggest superpower is public opinion (the beast), let's use it and not allow these creeps to tame it.

They (and the Yanks) are all trying to convince us to be scared so that they can implement the Imperial Grand Strategy and they're penchant for "Preventative" war.
F**k em all I say!

The world's second biggest superpower is public opinion (the beast), let's use it and not allow these creeps to tame it.



The Delicate Sound of Thunder
- Aladinsaneuk
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seems to me that to live in Teflons free world, we have to lose our freedom
I object to being forced to carry ID - my understanding has always been that we are innocent until proven guilty and have the right to remain silent - under proposed ID laws, we would no longer have that right specifically
(Case in point - unless arrested, you are not obliged to give your name and address to a police officer.... sounds petty, but afaik, we have not lost a war in real terms for a shit long time, so why should we surrender our civil rights??)
I object to being forced to carry ID - my understanding has always been that we are innocent until proven guilty and have the right to remain silent - under proposed ID laws, we would no longer have that right specifically
(Case in point - unless arrested, you are not obliged to give your name and address to a police officer.... sounds petty, but afaik, we have not lost a war in real terms for a shit long time, so why should we surrender our civil rights??)
We already carry ID. Passport, NI number, driving licence. then of course there's things like, credit cards, debit cards, family allowance, pensions, the list is endless.Aladinsaneuk wrote:seems to me that to live in Teflons free world, we have to lose our freedom
I object to being forced to carry ID - my understanding has always been that we are innocent until proven guilty and have the right to remain silent - under proposed ID laws, we would no longer have that right specifically
(Case in point - unless arrested, you are not obliged to give your name and address to a police officer.... sounds petty, but afaik, we have not lost a war in real terms for a shit long time, so why should we surrender our civil rights??)
I must admit to liking the idea that with everyones finger prints being known, maybe they'll catch a few of those criminals who have evaded justice. Alternately they could have a dna register, they can start that for babies straight away, without the parents knowing.
- Aladinsaneuk
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we are not OBLIGED to carry id - many of us do carry credit cards etc - but we don't have to
(Hence the 7 day wonders known as producers!)
as for a dna register - I have mixed feelings - yes, it would be a damned ood idea - but only if we can be certain that no one abuses it; current government guidelines on the proposed system have a few holes in them... if you are arrested then your dna/prints etc can be taken, if you are released, those records are supposed to be destroyed..... turns out that that is a bit of a grey area though
I just strongly think that we are loosing our civic freedoms in a flawed attempt to protect our way of life - and to that end, we are becoming what we are supposed to be "fighting" for want of a better word
(Hence the 7 day wonders known as producers!)
as for a dna register - I have mixed feelings - yes, it would be a damned ood idea - but only if we can be certain that no one abuses it; current government guidelines on the proposed system have a few holes in them... if you are arrested then your dna/prints etc can be taken, if you are released, those records are supposed to be destroyed..... turns out that that is a bit of a grey area though
I just strongly think that we are loosing our civic freedoms in a flawed attempt to protect our way of life - and to that end, we are becoming what we are supposed to be "fighting" for want of a better word
...which is the problem with any identification register. I have no problem with ID cards, biometric passports, dna/fingerprint registers or whatever IF i can be sure the system will not be abused. Of course I have EVERY confidence that it would be efficiently run and competently managed.Aladinsaneuk wrote: - but only if we can be certain that no one abuses it



