秘密紙顯露勞方的謊言在ID卡片
在文件顯露了它總計劃使有爭議的計劃必修之後,政府面對引入歧途的選民損害索賠在ID卡片。
Whitehall紙,政府戰鬥二年壓制,透露勞方意欲迫使公眾簽字由節目決定。
他們在它的2005年競選宣言看上去抗辯勞方給的承諾,承諾卡片,并且包含人的名字,地址、指印和其他信息的民族性記數器,是`根據一個義務依據』。
The briefing notes, released under the Freedom Of Information Act, show that civil servants had already been told ID cards would be compulsory for everyone by 2014.
Opposition MPs said the papers proved the Government had ‘purposely set out to mislead the public and politicians about their plans’.
The Department For Work And Pension’s (DWP) ‘ID Fraud Benefit Profile’ was produced in October 2004 and was designed to show how the project would cut benefit fraud.
In a table illustrating the predicted yearly savings expected by the department it states that from 2014 - Year 7 of the project - ‘The identity card scheme is now compulsory’.
But 18 months later, the then Home Secretary Charles Clarke insisted the scheme was voluntary. He told MPs: “In accordance with the Labour party’s Election manifesto…we will introduce ID cards…initially on a voluntary basis.”
The papers also undermine claims by Ministers that the scheme would halve the £50million lost to benefit cheats. The internal briefing reveals that the much-quoted savings were purely guesswork by officials.
It says: “NOTE: DWP perceive losses to identity fraud to be between £25-£50million per annum, due to the nature of our business processes and recording of monetary value of fraud and error the figures are unreliable therefore DWP can only sign up to a maximum saving in the area of £25million per annum.”
The first ID cards are due to be issued in 2009 to anybody who applies for a passport. Britons will be required to give fingerprints, biometric details such as a facial scan and a wealth of personal details - including second homes, driving licence and insurance numbers.
While the ID Cards Bill was going through Parliament, peers and Ministers agreed an ‘opt-out’ for people who needed a passport but did not want to join the ID cards scheme. But to get a passport, ID card objectors will now still have to hand over all personal details to the ID cards register.
Former Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Mark Oaten, who successfully fought to get the internal documents published, said: “They show Ministers had no basis to claim the cards would combat benefit fraud, that from the very beginning the cards were going to be compulsory and that Ministers were consistently not telling the truth about their true intentions.”
The DWP said the details in the papers ‘are no longer valid’.
A Home Office spokesman said the documents were ‘incredibly out of date’.
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