By silicon.com, 31 March 2006 16:35
After a two-year struggle the government finally got its way this week when the Conservative Party lost its nerve and backed down over the controversial ID cards bill.
Conservatives and Liberal Democrats in the House of Commons and the House of Lords had been united in opposing the introduction of ID cards until the climb-down, presented as a 'compromise', finally let the government off the hook.
The Tories came out straight after giving in to say they will scrap the bill if they win the next general election. Big words from the bottlers in blue but given the amount of money that will likely have been spent on the ID card scheme by then and the number of contracts that will have been signed - presumably with costly get-out clauses - that's going to be a difficult thing to do.
Not all the Conservatives caved in. While shadow Home Secretary David Davis decided to side with the Home Secretary on this one, some of the more tech-savvy Conservative MPs, such as Grant Shapps, maintained their opposition to the end.
It's foolish to believe there has been any compromise. Yes, until 2010 you'll have the option of declining an ID card when you renew your passport but you still have to pay for the cost of the card regardless of whether you receive it and you'll still have your fingerprint and iris scans stored in the national identity database.
Home Secretary Charles Clarke, frustrated by the delays in passing the bill, has wasted no time and the new Identity and Passport Service begins work in earnest from this Saturday - April Fool's day, no less.
No doubt tenders have been readied for the IT suppliers chomping at the bit to cash in on this project.
Here on silicon.com we will shift the focus of our ID Cards on Trial campaign towards scrutinising the procurement and delivery of the scheme every step of the way.
None of our original concerns over the cost, scope and benefits of ID cards have been answered satisfactorily by the government and so we will persevere. Indeed, having watched hours of parliamentary debates on the topic, we are now even more convinced that figures are being plucked from thin air and that the government is making some dangerous assumptions.The London School of Economics estimates ID cards will cost up to £19bn over 10 years and that figure remains the only definitive public costing of the scheme to date, despite criticisms from the Home Office that it is flawed.
Meanwhile numerous technology experts have raised questions about the reliability of biometrics used on this scale and the near impossibility of securing a vast national identity database holding the personal information, biometrics and audit trail of most of the UK population.
Then there are the privacy implications - and the lack of scrutiny of the ID card scheme and database afforded to the UK's data protection watchdog, the Information Commissioner.
The Home Office wants us to trust it on this one. That'll be the same Home Office that can't be tasked with keeping its own books in order and that has failed to deliver a national firearms database for the police in the 10 years following the Dunblane school shootings.
The Home Office will undoubtedly try and keep a lid on the ID card scheme but we will continue to investigate the costs and technical underpinnings. And the IT suppliers who sign up for ID card contracts will also see their work watched carefully by the media, nowhere more so than on these pages.
That's the limit of our campaign - which all along has been based on feasibility rather than principles - but for those who want to take more direct action there are other avenues. Opposition group No2ID, for example, has vowed to fight on, warning that ID cards will become as unpopular as the Poll Tax once the wider general public realises the full implications.
Feel free to contribute to this debate by posting a Reader Comment below.

Comments
There are 7 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
Reading through http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmselect/cmsctech/uc900-iii/uc90002.htm which is the uncorrected oral transcript of the minutes of evidence taken befor the Science and Technology Comittee
You find that the government has no idea what the final cost will be
You find that the government has no idea what technology will be used
You find that the government hasn't conducted any trials and won't until after the procurement phase
You find that the government has no idea of the levels of security needed
You find that the government will have everything in place within two and a half years, this gives 18 months for procurement and selection and possibly 12 months for trials
You find that it's all going to work perfectly first time
As the Government seems to be in possession of a fully functional, if rose tinted, crystal ball maybe they can use it to pick next saturdays lotto numbers and pay for the scheme with the winnings
Or better yet maybe they can use it to see what their chances of winning the next election will be
2. yutt
This is starting to feel like the US Military Industrial Complex law of economics whereby Govt masks weaknesses in the national economy through the handout of large multiyear contracts to suppliers.
Regardless of the obvious weaknesses of the whole scheme, from concept, to plan, to benefits realisation, it is going to proceed using mechanisms that make it impossible to undo.
While I'm concerned about
a) my civil liberties,
b) the red herring effect on terror suppression,
c) the additional taxation required to pay for this and
d) the sheer lack of democracy that I feel is going on here,
I am more concerned about the black shadow looming behind that is the national economy. Especially if strategies such as these is so poorly masked.
Imagine - taxation rising through the mandatory purchase of govt products, the revenue of which is used to prop up industries with strong lobbying groups. mmmmm......
3. Christine Hogg
It is disappointing that the Government is going to waste so much money in this direction. Money will be better spent on our Security Forces. I for one will not submit to having an ID card and will pay a fine or go to prison, if need be.
4. L Smith
I agree with you yutt.
Perhaps more people should read 'IBM and the Holocaust' by Edwin Black to see how these things could be used to control a population. A route to ethic cleansing if ever there was one and do not feel complacent anyone as some future tyrant may decide that you are decended along a deffective gene line and need to be steralised.
5. Richard
"Ethic cleansing" (sic): A marvellous description for so many of the current government's actions.
Thanks L. Smith.
6. nina steggar
When I voted for Tony Blair I thought that he was saying voluntary and Michael Howard who had first mooted these ideas in the last Tory govt would say definately. Instead, it appears that Blair and his lot had said voluntary to help them when people walk past the tv at 6 and just hear the word voluntary.
They are liars and Clarke has given himself lots of power. What happens if as a result of political funding of the people like the BNP we wake up one morning to find BNP almost in power or having a say in the running of the country when the police are armed with this massive database. People ought to realise now what is going on.
7. anonymous
ID cards aside, has anyone considered how controversial the national number plate recognition system is? This is being put into place with no debate and yet will allow the tracking of all (yes all) vehicles anywhere on our main roadways.
This information is to be kept on all vehicles for six years. Lets hope that it is secure.