The Prime Minister is insisting the ID card plan will "move ahead" despite
Tory protests following the scandals involving lost personal data by his
government,
Speaking at his first Prime Minister's Questions session of 2008, Gordon
Brown said the a parliamentary vote on making the card compulsory would take
place after the voluntary system has been put in place, depending on the success
of the initial scheme.
He brushed aside concerns about the missing data to insist the purpose would
be to "protect people's identity" by using biometrics to prevent information
being used without facial or fingerprint recognition. The cards will contain
little more information than is held in a passport.
Tory leader David Cameron - who made it clear he supports ID cards for
foreign visitors but is opposed to a compulsory scheme for UK citizens - said:
"What we've learned over the last few months is that it is completely unsafe to
trust the government with any more of our identity information."
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