The UK government will consult on whether children aged between 13 and 16-years-old should have digital ID cards under plans to expand the role of the state in people’s lives
Critics have lashed out at the latest proposals branding them “sinister” and “unnecessary”
However, foreign secretary Yvette Cooper says she supports the Department for Science Innovation and Technology’s consultation on digital ID for young children: “Lots of 13-year-olds already do [have a form of digital ID], and what the department is going to be consulting on is exactly how that should be taken forward.”
Despite a nationwide backlash to the scheme, the proposed UK-wide scheme, the Brit Card’ is set to be introduced by 2029, and will be available to all UK citizens and legal residents but only mandatory in order to work.
The BBC reports: A spokesperson said the government “need to consult” on including children as young as 13, since many already work part-time.
“As we announced, it will be a legal requirement for employers to check someone’s digital ID as part of Right to Work checks.” the government spokesperson added.
“Children can work part-time from the age of 14. In some local council areas this is from the age of 13.”
Under the proposals, digital ID will be available for free to all UK citizens and legal residents. It will be mandatory only for those seeking employment, while remaining optional for students, pensioners and others not entering the workforce.
Defending the plans to consider the inclusion of 13 to 16-year-olds in the scheme, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told LBC: “Everybody has forms of digital ID… We all have different ways of having to prove who we are.
“Lots of 13-year-olds already do [have a form of digital ID], and what the department is going to be consulting on is exactly how that should be taken forward.
“I do think that this is the right way forward, to have this standardised process now, and it’s something that we had been already setting out for people who come to work from abroad.”
The UK petition opposing the IDs warns the scheme could lead to “mass surveillance and digital control”.
However, civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch branded the scheme “Orwellian” and urged MPs to reject plans.
Director Silkie Carlo said: “The prospects of enrolling even children into this sprawling biometric ID system is sinister, unjustified and prompts the chilling question of just what Starmer’s government think the digital ID will be used for in the future.
“At a time when parents are taking a critical view of whether children should have smartphones, it is shocking that the government is considering enrolling children into this digital ID app.”
The Liberal Democrats said the consultation on offering digital ID to 13-year-olds showed they had been right to warn about “mission creep”.
“It is frankly sinister, unnecessary, and a clear step towards state overreach,” said the party’s science and technology spokesperson Victoria Collins.