Reasons given for the need for introduction Initial attempts to introduce a voluntary identity card were made under the
Conservative government of
John Major, under then Home Secretary
Michael Howard. At the
Labour Party conference in 1995,
Tony Blair demanded that "instead of wasting hundreds of millions of pounds on compulsory ID cards as the Tory Right demand, let that money provide thousands more police officers on the beat in our local communities." It was included in the Conservative election manifesto for the 1997 general election, in which Labour returned to office. A proposal for ID cards, to be called "entitlement cards", was initially revived by the
Home Secretary at the time,
David Blunkett, following the
terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, but was reportedly opposed by
Cabinet colleagues. However, rising concerns about identity theft and the misuse of public services led to a proposal in February 2002 for the introduction of entitlement cards to be used to obtain
social security services, and a consultation paper,
Entitlement Cards and Identity Fraud, was published by the Home Office on 3 July 2002. A public consultation process followed, which resulted in a majority of submissions by organisations being in favour of a scheme to verify a person's identity accurately. However, it was clear that the ability to properly identify a person to their true identity was central to the proposal's operation, with wider implications for operations against crime and terrorism. In 2003, Blunkett announced that the Government intended to introduce a "British national
identity card" linked to a national identity database, the National Identity Register. The proposals were included in the November 2003 Queen's Speech, despite doubts over the ability of the scheme to prevent
terrorism. Feedback from the consultation exercise indicated that the term "entitlement card" was superficially softer and warmer, but less familiar and "weaselly", and consequently the euphemism was dropped in favour of "identity card". During a private seminar for the
Fabian Society in August 2005,
Tony McNulty, the minister in charge of the scheme, stated "perhaps in the past the government, in its enthusiasm, oversold the advantages of identity cards", and that they "did suggest, or at least implied, that they might well be a panacea for identity fraud, for benefit fraud, terrorism, entitlement and access to public services". He suggested that they should be seen as "a
gold standard in proving your identity". Documentation released by the Home Office demonstrated analysis conducted with the private and public sector showed the benefits of the proposed identity card scheme could be quantified at £650m to £1.1bn a year, with a number of other, less quantifiable, strategic benefits — such as disrupting the activities of organised crime and terrorist groups.
Legislative progress The Identity Cards Bill was included in the
Queen's Speech on 23 November 2004, and introduced to the
House of Commons on 29 November. It was first voted on by
Members of Parliament following the
second reading of the bill on 20 December 2004, where it passed by 385 votes to 93. The bill was opposed by 19
Labour MPs, 10
Conservative MPs, and the
Liberal Democrats, while a number of Labour and Conservative members abstained, in defiance of party policies. A separate vote on a proposal to reject the Bill was defeated by 306 votes to 93.
Charles Clarke, the new Home Secretary, had earlier rejected calls to postpone the reading of the Bill following his recent appointment. The
third reading of the bill in the Commons was approved on 11 February 2005 by 224 votes to 64; a majority of 160. Although being in favour in principle, the Conservatives officially abstained, but 11 of their MPs joined 19 Labour MPs in voting against the Government. The Bill then passed to the
House of Lords, but there was insufficient time to debate the matter, and Labour were unable to do a deal with the Conservatives in the short time available in the days before Parliament was dissolved on 11 April, following the announcement of the
2005 general election. Labour's
manifesto for the 2005 general election stated that, if returned to power, they would "introduce ID cards, including biometric data like fingerprints, backed up by a national register and rolling out initially on a voluntary basis as people renew their passports". In public speeches and on the campaign trail, Labour made clear that they would bring the same Bill back to Parliament. In contrast, the Liberal Democrat manifesto opposed the idea because, they claimed, ID cards "don't work", while the Conservatives made no mention of the issue.
After the 2005 election Following their 2005 general election victory, the Labour Government introduced a new Identity Cards Bill, substantially the same as the previous Bill, into the Commons on 25 May. The Conservatives joined the Liberal Democrats in opposing the Bill, saying that it did not pass their "five tests". These tests included confidence that the scheme could be made to work, and its impact on civil liberties. In December 2005, the Conservative Party elected a new leader, future Prime Minister
David Cameron, who opposed ID cards in principle. The second reading of the Bill on 28 June was passed, 314 votes to 283, a majority of 31. At its third reading in the Commons on 18 October, the majority in favour fell to 25, with 309 votes in favour to 284 against. In the report stage between the readings, the Bill was amended to prevent the National Identity Register database being linked to the
Police National Computer. In early 2006, the Bill was passed through the
House of Lords committee stage, where 279 amendments were considered. One outcome of this was a vote demanding that the Government instruct the
National Audit Office to provide a full costing of the scheme over its first ten years, and another demanding that a "secure and reliable method" of recording and storing the data should be found. A third defeat limited the potential for ID cards to be required before people could access public services. On 23 January, the House of Lords defeated the government by backing a fully voluntary scheme. The committee stage ended on 30 January, and the third reading of the Bill took place on 6 February, after which it returned to the Commons. There, on 18 February, the legislation was carried by a majority of 25, with 25 Labour MPs joining those opposing it. Following the defeats in the House of Lords, the government changed the Bill in order to require separate legislation to make the cards compulsory; however, an amendment to make it possible to apply for a biometric passport without having to register on the National Identity Register database was defeated, overturning the Lords' changes to make the Bill fully voluntary. The Lords' amendment requiring a National Audit Office report was rejected. The Bill returned to the Lords on 6 March, where the Commons amendments were reversed by a majority of 61. The defeat came despite ministers warning that the Lords should follow the
Salisbury Convention by refraining from blocking a manifesto commitment. Both Conservatives and Liberal Democrats stated generally in 2005 that they no longer felt bound to abide by the convention, while in this specific case several Lords stated that it would not apply as the manifesto commitment was for implementation on a voluntary basis as passports are renewed, rather than being compulsory as passports are renewed.
Subsequent votes: • 13 March: House of Commons — majority of 33 for Government (310 to 277) • 15 March: House of Lords — majority of 35 against Government (218 to 183) • 16 March: House of Commons — majority of 51 for Government (292 to 241) • 20 March: House of Lords — majority of 36 against Government (211 to 175) • 21 March: House of Commons — majority of 43 for Government (284 to 241) On 29 March, the House of Lords voted in favour of a new plan with a majority of 227 (287 to 60). Under this scheme, everyone renewing a passport from 2008 would be entered on the national passport and ID database. The Government said that from the identity card's introduction in 2010, people could voluntarily apply for a card, though they would still have to pay for one, and would be placed on the passport and ID database. The Bill received
Royal assent on 30 March 2006.
Timescale and implementation progress On 11 October 2006, the Labour government announced a timescale described as "highly ambitious" by computer experts. The
Home Office announced that it would publish an ID management action plan in the months from November 2006, followed by agreements with departments on their uses for the system. There was to be a report on potential private sector uses for the scheme before the 2007 Budget. On 25 September 2006, Home Office Minister Liam Byrne said that "There are opportunities which give me optimism to think that actually there is a way of exploiting systems already in place in a way which brings down the costs quite substantially". Emails leaked in June 2006 indicated that the plan was already in difficulty, with plans for the early introduction of a limited register and ID card with reduced biometrics known as the "early variant" described as a "huge risk". Due to the costs of developing a new system from scratch, in 2007, the Government approved an alternative plan to use the
Department for Work and Pensions Customer Information System to store the biographical information, linked to a new database to store biometrics, despite concerns over issues of inter-departmental governance, funding and accountability which were never resolved. The schedule for putting passport applicants' and renewers' details on the National Identity Register (NIR) was never announced. A nationwide network of 68 interview offices for first-time passport applicants started opening in June 2007 and was subsequently completed. The interview consisted mainly of asking applicants to confirm facts about themselves, which someone attempting to steal their identity may not know. The government stated that all personal information used in the interview not required for the application was destroyed shortly after the passport was issued. Fingerprints were not taken. Plans to take iris scans were dropped, although the Government had not ruled them out as a future option. In March 2008, the
Home Secretary announced that people could choose to have an identity card, a passport, or both when they became available (although they could not opt out of having their details recorded on the NIR). On 25 November 2008, people making applications to remain in the United Kingdom as a student or based on marriage were required to have an identity card. Under those plans, it was estimated that by the end of 2014–15 about 90% of all foreign nationals would have been issued with one. On 22 January 2008, the Home Office confirmed that large numbers of cards would not be issued until 2012; however, ID cards were issued to workers in critical locations, starting with
airside workers in
Manchester and
London City airports in 2009, and young people were being offered cards in 2010. A leaked document, published on 29 January 2008, suggested that "universal compulsion should not be used unless absolutely necessary... due the need for inevitably controversial and time-consuming primary legislation" but that "various forms of coercion, such as designation of the application process for identity documents issued by British ministers (e.g. passports) were an option to stimulate applications in a manageable way". In January 2008, the
Financial Times reported that
Accenture and
BAE Systems had withdrawn from the procurement process.
Fujitsu Services,
CSC,
EDS,
IBM,
Steria and
Thales Group were still negotiating framework agreements with the government. On 1 August 2008, it was confirmed that Thales Group was awarded a four-year contract to work on the design, building, testing and operation of the National Identity Scheme. On 25 September 2008,
Jacqui Smith unveiled replicas of the first actual cards to be issued as residence permits to foreign nationals. The first to receive ID cards were foreign nationals, from 25 November 2008. This scheme continued as the Biometric Residence Permit. Availability was planned to be expanded to all British Citizens on a voluntary basis by 2012. Although in later rollout stages, it was envisioned that retailers could accept applications and be able to charge processing fees; the total cost to applicants was expected to be up to £60 per card. The
Manchester Evening News revealed in 2010 that senior Whitehall officials were urged to email friends and relatives encouraging them to buy cards, because of fears about the level of demand.
Identity card for foreign nationals (Biometric Residence Permit) Originally called the
Identity Card for Foreign Nationals which was blue and pink in colour,
Initial rollout The initial rollout began on a regional basis, first in Greater Manchester. The cards were voluntary and cost £30 and were issued by the Identity and Passport Service, until its eventual cancellation. •
October 2009: Greater Manchester residents – applications opened to all residents of Greater Manchester •
November 2009: Air industry staff – a pilot scheme involving free, voluntary ID cards for airside workers at Manchester and London City airports. •
January 2010: North West England - applications opened to residents in Cheshire, Merseyside, Lancashire and Cumbria •
February 2010: Young London residents – applications opened to all residents of London aged 16–24 who already had a passport or a recently expired one.
Planned wider rollout •
Young people opening bank accounts (voluntary) – in 2010, young people would have been encouraged to get ID cards when they opened bank accounts.
2010 general election During the
2010 general election campaign, the published
manifestos of the various parties revealed that the Labour Party planned to continue the introduction of the identity card scheme, while all other parties pledged to discontinue plans to issue ID cards. The Conservative Party also explicitly pledged to scrap the National Identity Register, while the wording of several other manifestos implied that this may have been the position of certain other parties too.
Ending of the scheme In the
Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition agreement that followed the 2010 general election, the new government announced that they planned to scrap the ID card scheme, including the National Identity Register (as well as the next generation of biometric passports and the
ContactPoint database), as part of their measures "to reverse the substantial erosion of civil liberties under the Labour Government and roll back state intrusion." The
Identity Documents Act 2010 was announced on 27 May 2010, passed by the House of Commons on 15 September 2010 and received Royal Assent on 21 December 2010. Section 1(1) of the Identity Documents Act repealed the Identity Cards Act 2006 on 21 January 2011 (making ID cards invalid) and mandated the destruction of all data on the National Identity Register by 21 February 2011. In May 2010 the Identity and Passport service stopped accepting applications for identity cards. On 21 January 2011, identity cards already issued became invalid, despite the cards themselves stating a 10-year expiry. The National Identity Register was officially destroyed on Thursday, 10 February 2011, when the final 500 hard drives containing the register were shredded at RDC in Witham, Essex. Some aspects of the original Identity Cards Act were continued including
biometric British passports as well as the
Identity Card for Foreign Nationals, which were renamed and continued as
Biometric Residence Permits (BRP). The new Identity Documents Act 2010 allows private companies to issue proof of age cards, under the
PASS scheme. PASS scheme cards are not usable as identification in most circumstances except for purchasing age-restricted items. ==Historical and international comparisons==