ID Cards – Working Class People Will Pay The Price

What we think

ID Cards – Working Class People Will Pay The Price

David Blunkett has declared that the population of
Britain isn’t ‘allowed’ to know how much his ID card scheme will cost, for
reasons of ‘commercial secrecy’! 

We do know, however, that it is expected to
cost somewhere between £1.3 and £3.1 billion. The final cost is likely to
be far higher.

New Labour can find money for ID cards yet claim they
cannot afford to spend tax payers’ money restoring the right to free
education. The abolition of fees would cost around £1.5 billion a year and
for £3 billion a year it would be possible to also introduce a living grant
for all students.

Blunkett would rather spend the money on ID cards. He
claims that the cards are necessary in order to prevent Britain becoming a
‘soft touch’ for terrorists. But there is no evidence that ID cards will
help prevent a terrorist attack. 

After all both Madrid and New York have
forms of ID cards. In fact the security services are not arguing for an ID
card, explaining that terrorists rarely try to conceal their identity. Nor
will an ID card help prevent crime. 

Tory 

Even Peter Lilley – a former Tory
minister – says that the police "almost never had problems identifying
suspects, only in catching and convicting them".

Instead, ID cards will criminalise law-abiding
working-class people. Blunkett is proposing that the fine for failing to
have an ID card will be £2,500. The fine for forgetting to tell the
authorities that you have changed address or got married will be £1,000! 

And although it will not be compulsory to carry an ID card until 2013, we
will all have to pay twice as much for driving licenses and passports that
double as ID cards from 2007.

Charles Clarke has already declared that it will be
compulsory to have an ID card if you want to receive a student loan, and it
is clear that New Labour’s longer term intention is to make us show our ID
cards to receive any public service.

Increase rationing of public services

ID cards are designed to increase rationing of public
services. They will also lead to increased police harassment of all those
who already suffer from it – particularly young people from ethnic
minorities – who are already five times more likely to be stopped and
searched by the police.

Any ID card system set up by New Labour is also
guaranteed to be chaotic, particularly given their privatisation fetish
which means that the new scheme is almost certain to be run by a private
company for profit.

 Look at the fiasco at the passport office a couple of
years ago, or the amount of time and bureaucracy it takes to claim any
benefit, and imagine the Kafkaesque nightmare that the ID scheme is bound to
be.

However, New Labour is wrong to think that its
successful implementation is a foregone conclusion. Britain’s last ID scheme
was abolished in 1951 as a result of massive public opposition and civil
disobedience. 

More recently in Australia plans for ID cards were scrapped as
initial public support was transformed into massive opposition as the
reality of the scheme became clear.

 Socialists will campaign to try and
ensure the same happens here.