- Opinion polls on the British national identity card
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Contents
2003
The announcement of the scheme followed a public consultation, particularly among 'stakeholder groups' pdf. At March 2003 the government stated that the overall results were:
- in favour: 2606 responses (61%)
- against: 1587 responses (38%)
- neutral: 48 responses (1%)
However the government has been criticised for ignoring the overwhelming majority of those replying who stated that they did not want national identity cards. The government claimed that over five thousand negative online responses through a single portal site, organised by stand, represented one lobby group so treated them as one reply, thus reversing what would otherwise have been recognised as an overwhelming vote against national identity cards. However, the Government claimed that many supportive organisations did not number their entire membership numbers in their submissions and thus, it would not be a true representation to include each individual submission by this campaign.
2004
Some polls have indicated that public opinion on the issue varies across the UK. The 2004 State of the Nation poll [1] by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust showed that opinion in Scotland was far less supportive than that in the rest of the UK. Although that trend is reversed in other polls.[citation needed]
In a poll for Detica conducted by MORI in March 2004 [2] showed that 80% of those polled were in favour of a national identity card (11% opposed), although 67% of them have little or no knowledge about the Government's proposed national ID card scheme. Furthermore, only 54% were prepared to pay for a card, with 80% unwilling to pay more than £25. 83% were in favour of carrying the card at all times, though only 44% were in favour of the police being given powers to see it on demand. 58% doubted that the Government could bring in such a scheme smoothly.
In May 2004 a YouGov poll for Privacy International [3] indicated that 61% of the population supported compulsory identity cards. However in respect of the database maintenance elements, 47% opposed the legal requirement to notify a change of address (compared to 41% in favour), while 45% were against the legal requirement to report lost, stolen or damaged cards (44% in favour). 27% of those polled were 'strongly opposed' to fines. In the under 30 age group, 61% were opposed to fines. Of those opposing the scheme (percentage unstated), 28% would take part in demonstrations, 16% would take part in civil disobedience, and 6% would prefer prison to registering.
2005
National opinion polls suggest that the expected cost of the cards affects levels of support. An estimate from the Home Office placed the cost of a 10-year passport and ID card package at £85, while after the 2005 General Election in May 2005 they issued a revised figure of over £93[1], and announced that a "standalone" ID card would cost £30[2]. Two polls conducted by TNS at the end of 2005 amongst British Citizens and Foreign Residents demonstrated over 65% support for identity cards backed by a central database with a cost of an identity card at £30 and a passport/identity card package at approximately £100[citation needed]. However, the research conducted by MORI in 2004 showed that only 20% were willing to pay more than £25. The publicised costs also do not include an estimated £30 for processing fees, making the total costs up to £60 for a standalone card, and £123 for a passport/identity card.[3]
A 2005 poll on the BBC web site indicated that of the nearly 9,000 voting, 17% were in favour, 83% against [4]. However, internet polls cannot be considered as being very reliable - indeed, the wording under the poll result states that results of such polls cannot be taken as indicative of public opinion.
Before the July 2005 London bombings, a Telegraph/YouGov poll [5] showed that 66% of people were opposed to the scheme if it cost £6bn and 81% opposed if it cost £10-19bn. However, the questions in such polls have often failed to reflect that the costs issued by the Government already included the running costs of the existing Passport Service[citation needed].
The NO2ID opposition group announced in September 2005 that 11,369 people have pledged to refuse to register for an ID card and will donate £10 to a legal defence fund if the Bill becomes law.
2006
In February 2006, a YouGov/Daily Telegraph poll [6] indicated that public support for the scheme had fallen to 52% (with 37% opposed), despite 60% of those polled stating that those with nothing to hide should have no objection to the scheme. It revealed that the following percentages of people thought that the scheme would:
- 64% - cut benefit fraud
- 62% - cut health tourism
- 55% - cut bogus asylum-seekers
- 43% - help catch criminals
- 42% - will make life simpler and more convenient
- 21% - cut chances of terrorist atrocities
At the same time, it showed that the following percentages thought:
- 80% - determined criminals and terrorists will forge the cards
- 74% - the scheme will be enormously expensive
- 71% - information will be hacked or leaked
- 61% - information will be improperly passed to foreign governments
- 60% - will be time consuming and inconvenient
- 55% - will contain incorrect information
- 51% - card readers will often malfunction or read inaccurately
In July 2006, an ICM poll [7] indicated that public support had fallen further to 46%, with opposition growing to 51%:
Q1. The government has proposed the introduction of identity cards that in combination with your passport, will cost around £93. From what you have seen or heard do you think the proposal is...?
- Very good idea 12%
- Good idea 34%
- Bad idea 29%
- Very bad idea 22%
- Very good idea 10%
- Good idea 31%
- Bad idea 33%
- Very bad idea 23%
A further poll by YouGov/Daily Telegraph, published on December 4, 2006, indicated support for the identity card element of the scheme at 50%, with 39% opposed. Support for the national database was weaker, with 41% happy and 52% unhappy with the prospect of having their data recorded. Only 11% trusted the government to keep the data confidential. 3.12% of the sample were prepared to undergo long prison sentences rather than have a card [8].
References
- ^ Tempest, Matthew (May 25, 2005). "ID card cost soars as new bill published". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2005/may/25/immigrationpolicy.idcards. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
- ^ "Q&A: Identity cards". BBC News. July 2, 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3127696.stm. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
- ^ "Retailers reject ID security fear". BBC News. May 6, 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8036536.stm. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
Categories:- Personal identification documents
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