
ID cards won't work
ID cards won't prevent terrorist
attacks: The former Home Secretary,
Charles Clarke, has admitted that ID cards would not have prevented
the 7 July 2005 bombings in London, saying: 'I doubt if it would have
made a difference'. In Spain, ID cards are compulsory, but they did
not stop the Madrid bombings in March 2004.
ID cards won't prevent illegal
immigration: Foreign visitors will not
have to have an ID card, unless they plan to stay in the UK for more
than three months.
ID cards won't prevent identity
fraud: Microsoft's National Technology
Officer, Jerry Fishenden, has said that introducing ID cards could
make identity fraud worse, warning that it could 'trigger massive
identity fraud on a scale on a scale beyond anything we have seen
before'.
ID cards won't prevent human
trafficking: ID cards are no substitute
for a border police force and proper checks on people entering and
leaving the country. In 1998, the Government abolished border
controls, but its replacement, a computer-based e-borders scheme will
not be fully installed until 2014.

ID cards are a waste of money
ID cards will cost each person £93:
According to Government estimates, you
will pay at least £93 for a combined ID card and passport package but,
given this Government's appalling record of implementing IT projects,
this figure is likely to go up. Also, if your ID card is stolen, or
your lose it, you'll have to pay £30 for a replacement. If you change
your name when you get married, you'll have to pay for a new ID card.
If one of your relatives dies and you forget to return their ID card,
you could be fined £1,000.
ID cards scheme will cost up to
£20 billion in total: While the
Government claims that the scheme will cost £5.4 billion of taxpayers'
money, the independent London School of Economics estimates it will
cost up to £20 billion.
ID cards could be another
Government disaster: This Government
has a terrible record of large scale IT disasters. For example, the
botched introduction of the new Child Support Agency computer system
led to a backlog of 250,000 cases; clerical errors and problems with
the tax credits computer system led to millions of incorrect payments;
and an audit of the Police National Computer by the Met Police found
that 86 per cent of records were inaccurate.
ID cards are an invasion of
privacy
ID cards give the State too much
personal data in one place: Your ID
card could hold almost 30 separate pieces of personal information on
you, including your name, date and place of birth, gender, previous
addresses, photograph, signature, fingerprints and other biometric
details. All this information will also be stored on a massive Home
Office ID cards database, called the National Identity Register.
ID cards mean intrusive
interviews and fingerprinting: From
2009, unless you opt out, when you renew your passport you will have
to visit a Government 'interview centre' and give the Government your
fingerprints in order to get an ID card.
More prison places, more prisoner drug rehab & a
border police are good
ideas
A
Conservative Government will scrap the ID cards scheme. We will use
some of the savings to build more prison places, provide more drug
rehab in prisons and create a new border police force.
More prison places:
Our prisons are desperately
overcrowded, meaning serious criminals are escaping prison sentences
and prisoners are not being rehabilitated. Instead of wasting billions
of pounds on ID cards, shouldn't we use some of the savings to build
more prison spaces?
More drug rehab in
prisons: Drug addiction is a major
cause of crime in society, but there isn't enough effective drug rehab
in prisons to help get criminals off drugs for good. Instead of
wasting billions of pounds on ID cards, shouldn't we use some of the
savings to provide more drug rehabilitation to help prisoners kick the
habit?
A Border Police Force:
At present, many different agencies are
responsible for aspects of policing our borders. Instead of wasting
billions of pounds on ID cards, shouldn't we use some of the savings
to create a new UK border police force to prevent and detect illegal
immigration and to stop terrorists and suspected terrorists from
entering the country?
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