WRITTEN ON June 30th, 2009 BY William Heath AND STORED IN Foundation of Trust, Identity, What do we want?

Hurrah! In a step forwards for common sense and a step backward for the Benighted ID Scheme they’ve just scrapped compulsory ID Cards, and abandoned the airside workers scheme (Telegraph – Ian spotted it first)

He said the cards will now only be issued to Britons on a voluntary basis meaning no one will ever be forced to have one, effectively paving the way for the scheme to be scrapped altogether.

A pilot scheme for airside workers, which marked the first attempt at making the £4.9 billion programme compulsory for British nationals has been abandoned.

Mr Johnson even admitted the suggestion the cards would help combat terrorism was exaggerated as he accepted the Government should never have allowed “the perception to go around that they were a panacea for terrorism”.

Instead, the Home Office is now concentrating on the cards being useful for youngsters to prove their age when going in to pubs.

So let us rehearse the dance of the intellectual pygmies!

5 Responses to “Alan Johnson scraps compulsory ID Cards”

 
Ian Brown wrote on June 30th, 2009 7:53 pm :

I will be dancing into the night 😉

And could the Home Office explain what is wrong with the existing Pass proof of age scheme that needs a few billion pounds to put right?

David Moss wrote on June 30th, 2009 10:18 pm :

Alan Johnson says ID cards should be voluntary.

The same Alan Johnson says that the provision of public services is dependent on ID cards, see Ideal Government report on Safeguarding Identity.

Or maybe it’s another Alan Johnson.

Harry Metcalfe wrote on July 1st, 2009 12:14 am :

Hmm — still got designated documents though, I think? So still not really voluntary?

Braxis wrote on July 1st, 2009 1:15 am :

OK Kids, here’s a difficult decision.

Do you:

Provide the 52 separate items of information the Secretary of State requires from every ‘citizen’

Pay £30 on top of an already exorbitant passport fee.

Pay another £30 for the fun ‘criminal experience’ of having your fingerprints and iris patterns captured.

Attend, at your own expense, an intrusive interview into you personal and financial background.

Wait six weeks for your card to arrive.

Undertake to inform the IPS of every change of name, address and circumstances, or pay a thousand pound fine.

Repeat every ten years

Or, possibly, you would rather:

Pick up a CitizenCard leaflet at your local JD Wetherspoons.

Fill in the one page application form.

Post the application form off, with a cheque for £5.

Wait three weeks for your card, which never expires, to arrive.

It looks like a difficult decision to me – thankfully I’m too old to have to make it.

Nigel wrote on July 2nd, 2009 2:00 pm :

The only news here is the abandonment of the airside workers scheme (for now).

There’s never been a serious proposal to make the owning or carrying ID cards compulsory for the general populace, so there’s nothing to scrap.

The real issue is and always was the database underlying the scheme – the National Identity Register.

The plan is still very much in place to force anyone applying for or renewing a passport from 2011 to also register on the NIR. Unless a significant number of people are willing to give up the ability to travel outside the country that’s going to guarantee well over 70% (probably closer to 80%) of the UK population will be registered by 2021.

And that’s assuming they don’t extend compulsory registration to other documents (driving license perhaps?) in the meantime.