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‘BritCard’ digital ID risks shutting millions of people out of everyday life

The Labour government says a new national digital ID will curb illegal immigration. But the real effect could be shutting millions out of everyday life, writes digital inclusion expert Chloe Coleman

In association with O2

Keir Starmer has announced the government’s new flagship policy: BritCard, a mandatory national digital ID. The pitch is that it will stop illegal immigration. You won’t be able to work without it. You won’t be able to rent a home without it.

It’s presented as a deterrent. But anyone who has spent time in the real world knows that cash-in-hand jobs and dodgy landlords will continue to exist, and the ripple effects will hit those who are already struggling hardest, widening the inequalities it claims to solve.

Will it fix ID poverty?

Some argue that a “universal” solution like BritCard could help people who currently lack ID. But that depends entirely on how universal it really is. BritCards will be issued based on other records the government already holds on you.

What documents will you need to apply? How modern does your phone have to be? What if you get stopped by police with a dead phone battery? What if your family shares a phone, or you have no phone at all?

Fourteen million people in the UK don’t have a passport. Eleven million adults don’t have either a passport or driving licence. More than a million households still don’t have internet access, and sharing devices is commonplace in lower-income homes.

For people experiencing homelessness or fleeing domestic abuse, access to documents or devices can disappear overnight.

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If BritCard is mandatory, we risk further erasing people in these situations behind a neat story of “universal ID”.

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The reality of ID poverty

I worked in government for more than five years, including as a user researcher on universal credit during the pandemic. My job was making sure people got the money they were entitled to, and that meant proving who they were.

I saw people turn up to the Jobcentre carrying plastic wallets or whole ring binders full of papers: payslips, NHS letters, school certificates. Some were neatly labelled, others a jumble, grabbed in a panic. Some arrived with nothing at all; recent immigrants, people leaving prison, people whose violent ex had destroyed their documents.

The one thing they all had in common? They didn’t have what the system considered the “right” document. That was the barrier to accessing help, even when government already had information about them elsewhere. Even when they were known to a local shelter or had years of tax records.

The Tony Blair Institute optimistically suggests a £1 billion setup cost for the scheme, to fund “large scale enrolment”.

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Universal credit has been grappling with that same enrolment problem for a decade, and has burned substantially more than £1bn trying to reliably verify the people most in need in our society. BritCard risks making the problem many times worse.

What the government should be doing instead

In my first week as a researcher, a colleague told me: “People only come to government on the worst day of their lives.”

The government’s only real job is to make those moments less painful – to keep people safe, housed and fed. And when it can’t do that, it is at least to make sure people can do the basics they need to survive the worst day of their life.

A mandatory national ID risks doing the opposite: adding another layer of bureaucracy, cost and exclusion.

What BritCard won’t fix

We’ve already seen what happens when government pulls away support systems in the name of efficiency. When the Post Office Card Account service was shut down in 2022, tens of thousands of unbanked people were suddenly unable to get their benefits until credit unions and charities stepped in to help.

A BritCard won’t prevent that kind of disruption. A plastic or digital ID doesn’t create a more productive, equitable society by itself.

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We have a choice about what kind of country we want

Digital identity can be a force for good. It really can cut fraud, make public services cheaper to run, and give people control over where their data lives. But only if it is built to be truly universal, not as the centrepiece of an immigration crackdown.

If the government pushes ahead with BritCard as it stands, it won’t just miss the chance to fix ID poverty. It could make life even harder for the millions of people already locked out of work, housing and financial services. That’s not the kind of Britain we should be building.

Chloe Coleman is digital inclusion expert and co-founder of Vouchsafe, atech-for-good company.

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