If you are even remotely bothered by the intended introduction of ID cards, and it appears that - especially if we are made to pay for them - a large number of you actually are then please register your objection(s) using one or several of the mechanisms at your disposal:
1) e-mail the Home Office
"On 26 April 2004 the Government published 'Legislation on Identity Cards: a consultation' [553 KB PDF file]. This set out for consultation the Government’s plans for legislation on identity cards and includes the draft clauses of an Identity Cards Bill. We welcome comments on the draft legislation from individuals and organisations. These can be sent to identitycards@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk by including the words ‘consultation response’ in the subject title." Or by clicking on the e-mail address in the previous sentence...
2) Sign an e-petition* or vote in a poll
I'm sure there are/will be several out there - please let me know of any I have missed, and I shall attempt to make this a comprehensive list:
Liberty petition - click on the 'Petitions' tab, then 'No to ID Cards' link.
Trevor Mendham's BBC iCan campaign - registered BBCi members' votes have more clout
Clare Hewitt-Horsman's 'No to National Identity Cards in the UK' petition - although I'm not sure Clare has read the UK Government criteria for e-Petitions [see below].
UPDATED 5/5/04: The Campaign to Stop the National Identity Card (CASNIC) have an online petition.
*The Government has agreed to accept electronic petitions containing more than 300 'genuine signatures'. They appear to respond to each petition individually, even ones on the same subject, so long as it meets their basic criteria. Of course, the Government do not have a particularly good track record on aggregating individual responses into 'ad hoc petitions', hence my suggestion that you object using each of the different mechanisms available to you.
3) Fax your MP
Via the excellent FaxYourMP.com. Please pay attention to their guidelines and instructions and do not abuse this genuinely useful service, e.g. by trying to fax someone who isn't your MP. I have found it gets me a timely written response on House of Commons headed paper from my MP every time I use it - but then he is a Liberal Democrat!
4) Write a letter
Pretty much the same effect as (3) above, but with possibly a higher impact / better response rate. To find out the contact details of your local MP use this handy 'Constituency Locata' on the UK Parliament site.
Of course, you can write to any named MP at the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA - but before you do, here's some sensible advice from the BBC on 'Writing to a political representative'.
5) Join or support an organisation
There are many(!) but, with specific regard to ID cards, you will probably find the following most useful and up-to-date:
Posted by lankyphil at April 27, 2004 01:18 AM | TrackBack30 seconds of searches on who is ready & happy for ID Cards (it's not just the UK) produced this:
Leading technology companies such as Oracle and Sun Microsystems -- which stand to make the most money from linking state databases and developing a national ID system -- are lobbying for smart card legislation.
http://www.techtv.com/cybercrime/privacy/story/0,23008,3387575,00.html
UK citizens support ID cards, according to a report commissioned by the world's biggest smart card maker, SchlumbergerSema
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/emergingtech/0,39020357,2129590,00.htm
"The government could phase in digital ID cards to replace existing Social Security cards and driver's licenses. These new IDs should be based on a uniform standard such as credit card technology, which is harder to counterfeit than existing government IDs...."
http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47788,00.html
Microsoft Tamper Resistant Biometric ID Cards
http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/2/8/E28D34EC-4775-4626-AC19-A1B0E95E458C/MSRBiometricIDCardFS.doc
Its hardly surprising that the technology companies are lobbying for a smartcard future and, from direct experience of Oracle's manoeuvrings when I was at the BBC, I'm sure they'd LOVE to provide a national database...
What is a little surprising/interesting/suspicious is who just bought SchlumbergerSema [see 'Jobs for the boys' - http://www.infiniteideasmachine.com/archive/000018.html]
And I just know its got to be your twisted sense of humour to which the juxtaposition of 'Microsoft' and 'tamper resistant' appeals ;)
Posted by: lankyphil at May 5, 2004 04:59 PM