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    Home»Economy»Starmer Claims Digital IDs Not Mandatory
    Economy

    Starmer Claims Digital IDs Not Mandatory

    January 16, 20263 Mins Read
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    Keir Starmer temporarily pivoted on mandatory digital IDs, and although they will be rolled out in the UK by 2029, Starmer claims they will not be mandatory.

    Millions signed a petition to dismantle the digital ID system scheme when it was first announced. “Digital ID is an enormous opportunity for the UK. It will make it tougher to work illegally in this country, making our borders more secure,” Starmer declared in late 2025, citing illegal migration as the primary reason to implement the system. “And it will also offer ordinary citizens countless benefits, like being able to prove your identity to access key services swiftly – rather than hunting around for an old utility bill.”

    The plan would have required employers to cross-verify their employees’ digital IDs against the government’s centralized database to ensure they had the right to work in the UK. The Office for Budget Responsibility predicts cots will add £1.8 billion to government debt over the next three years. The government disagrees with that figure but has yet to provide a budget for the program.

    “Stepping back from mandatory use cases will deflate one of the main points of contention. We do not want to risk there being cases of some 65-year-old in a rural area being barred from ­working because he hasn’t downloaded this app,” a government source told The Times. “That does not impact normal people,” a secondary source said. “It always should have been about the convenience.”

    Convenience and safety—the promises provided in exchange for freedom. Heidi Alexander, the transport secretary, confidently declared that this NOT “some sort of massive U-turn,” as the plan is still in motion. “We said that we would have digital checks on people for right to work. That’s what we are continuing to do.”

    Governments claimed that the COVID vaccination was not technically mandatory, but citizens could not freely access society without proof of vaccination. The pattern is the same—you technically do not need to create a digital ID, but basic tasks will become increasingly difficult to the point where you either cave or find energy-intensive workarounds.

    Starmer is simply retaining voters until the program comes to fruition. If this were about convenience, the government would not be considering assigning every newborn a digital ID at birth. Every first-world nation has turned into a surveillance state. Governments turn increasingly authoritarian when they face economic collapse. It is a historic first to see governments insert their control through technology–the ultimate tool for control.



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