Starmer’s Checkpoint Britain: How Digital ID threatens our rights
Big Brother Watch hosts Starmer’s Checkpoint Britain: How Digital ID threatens our rights - during Conservative Party Conference
Date and time
Location
The Portico Library
57 Mosley Street Manchester M2 3HY United KingdomGood to know
Highlights
- 1 hour, 30 minutes
- In person
About this event
Since the 1950s, when a Conservative government scrapped ID cards introduced during the Second World War, every government attempt to introduce mandatory ID cards has been rejected by the British public. But the UK’s reputation as a country that has historically refused to become a checkpoint society is under threat thanks to new digital ID proposals, this time in the framework of tackling illegal immigration.
The Prime Minister is reportedly considering these proposals from Labour-friendly think tanks. But far from being a silver-bullet solution to illegal immigration or other societal issues, a mandatory digital ID scheme would fundamentally change our relationship with to the state and represent an irreversible erosion of our civil liberties. If the history of ID cards teaches us anything, it’s that mandatory ID schemes inevitably act as catalysts in ushering in a more intrusive era of surveillance.
The unique risks of digital ID are the focus of a new Big Brother Watch report, which scrutinises the rationale behind the current digital ID proposals and sets out a critique from a privacy perspective. With digital ID now a distinct possibility, what risks are the most concerning? How can conservatives oppose digital ID amid calls for a more tech-friendly state? What is the best way for us to secure our freedoms in an increasingly digital age? This timely panel will answer these and other pressing questions related to the latest calls for a national ID scheme.
Speakers:
Rebecca Vincent (moderator), Interim Director, Big Brother Watch
Jasleen Chaggar (lead report author), Legal and Policy Officer, Big Brother Watch
Sir David Davis, Conservative Member of Parliament for Goole and Pocklington
Reem Ibrahim, Head of Media and Linda Whetstone Scholar at the Institute of Economic Affairs.
As an independent, non-partisan civil liberties group, we’re committed to building cross-party support. We will be organising similar panel discussions during the Liberal Democrats and Labour Party conferences. Stay tuned for updates.
About Big Brother Watch:
Big Brother Watch is a UK civil liberties campaign group fighting for a free future. We’re determined to reclaim our privacy and defend freedoms at this time of enormous technological change. We’re a fiercely independent, diverse, non-partisan and non-profit group of campaigners and researchers, who work to roll back the surveillance state and protect rights in parliament, the media, and the courts if we have to. We publish unique investigations and pursue powerful public campaigns to pursue real change. We work relentlessly to inform and empower the public to collectively reclaim privacy, defend our civil liberties, and protect freedoms for the future.
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