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‘Millions to
rebel’ over ID cards
London Times |
April 9, 2007
By
Robert Winnett
and David Leppard
The government is predicting that
some 15m people will revolt against Tony Blair’s controversial ID
card scheme by refusing to produce the new cards or provide personal
data on demand.
The forecast is made in documents
released by the Home Office under the Freedom of Information Act.
The papers show ministers expect national protests similar to the
poll tax rebellions of the Thatcher era, with millions prepared to
risk criminal prosecution.
Opposition MPs said the new
documents proved their case that the programme would never work.
David Davis, the shadow home secretary, said: “This will cripple the
system. Fifteen million is a massive number. What the Home Office is
accepting in private, but refuses to accept in public, is that a
massive number of ordinary law-abiding citizens simply will not go
along with their scheme.”
Davis, whose party’s policy is to
scrap the cards, added: “This will render it completely useless as a
security or check mechanism of any sort.”
The documents, quietly released
during parliament’s Easter break, also show that the government is
planning to make ID cards compulsory in 2014, despite the expected
revolt.
The first cards are due in 2009,
alongside new passports. Labour has said it will make the scheme
compulsory if it wins the next election.
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