"ID cards are wrong, they're a waste of money," says Cameron...
By Andy McCue
Published: 3 October 2006 15:05 BST
Conservative Party leader David Cameron has pledged to scrap the government's ID cards scheme and undertake a full-scale review of the £12.4bn NHS IT project if the Tories win the next General Election.
In his speech at the Conservative Party conference in Bournemouth this week, Cameron slammed Prime Minister Tony Blair and the Labour Party for pushing on with the controversial ID cards scheme instead of "protecting our security by controlling our borders".
He told delegates: "These Labour ministers are pressing ahead with their vast white elephant, their plastic poll tax, 20 Millennium Domes rolled into one giant catastrophe in the making. ID cards are wrong, they're a waste of money, and we will abolish them."
Just last week UK government CIO John Suffolk hit back at critics of the ID cards scheme. Speaking at the silicon.com CIO Forum he said: "There is nothing new or cutting edge. I'm not sitting here worrying about the base technology."
Cameron also hit out at the delayed NHS IT "shambles" and listed a litany of high-profile government IT failures during Blair's time in power - "a story of wasted billions - and disappointed millions" - including the e-Universities, Individual Learning Accounts and tax credits.
The Tories have already promised a full-scale review of the NHS IT programme - which suffered a blow last week after key supplier Accenture ditched its £2bn contracts and bailed out of the project - should they win the next election.
I think that Cameron's Conservatives just may have...
Ken Hall
That's won my vote!
Far too much time, money a...
Richard
Excellent! Great news! At last the Conservative pa...
Steve Watkins
Obviously it would be better to immediately stop w...
John Ray
Looks like I will be voting Conservative at the ne...
Anonymous
HTML/JS - ODBC - Good analytical and problem solving skills - Excellent communication and presentation skills - Good planning and organisational ...
We strive to reflect RMs core values by providing a great working environment, and our active sports & social team hosts a wide variety of events ...
Main responsibilities: - Lead the development of contract critical development projects, using C#, ASP.NET, XML, web services and SQL - Provide ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
silicon.com
Inbox: Snooping bills, spam mountains, boring IT
"Have gov't all taken leave of their senses?"
Martyn Hart
Is short-termism holding back public sector outsourcing?
Comment: Driving down bids can store up trouble
silicon.com
Inbox: YouTube surveillance, skills gap, Naked speak
"It is up to citizens to use them, and not just moan in comments to silicon.com"
Andy McCue
The McCue Interview: Phil Pavitt, CIO, Transport for London
On why he's trying to make IT boring…
Julian Goldsmith
Leading a horse to water
Profile: Government CIO John Suffolk
Steve Ranger
Editor's Blog: Time to take the politicians out of technology?
We've given them their chance...