London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Friday, Jul 03, 2026

Why ID card plans are likely to pass this time

Why ID card plans are likely to pass this time

Letters: Jem Whitely, Mike Cushman, Martin Willey and Eleanor Martindale respond to Simon Jenkins’ article about the government’s plans for voter identity checks

Simon Jenkins is right (Johnson’s voter ID checks are not about electoral fraud, they’re about power, 18 May), but also wrong. This is not mainly about “regulation and surveillance of daily life”, it’s about voter suppression, and for the Tories it’s so much the better if, like so many of their policies, it disproportionately impacts ethnic minorities. Because, like Boris Johnson’s remarks about burqas and letterboxes, like the hostile environment that the Home Office is perpetuating, and like the detention of visiting foreign nationals, it signals to target voters that they can trust the Tories to tacitly indulge their prejudices.

The confected “perception” that voter fraud is a problem plays into a feeling triangulated between “they all look the same to me”, “they can’t be trusted”, and “they shouldn’t be allowed to vote in our elections anyway”. So it’s easy enough to see why the Tories promote cheap policy initiatives like this, like denying institutional racism, and like protecting statues, which their strategists will tell you play well in the former “red wall” constituencies and elsewhere. It’s less easy to work out how the other parties should react, because part of the beauty of all this for the Tories is that natural and laudable criticism precisely marks the opposition, in the minds of many of those voters, as fighting for and prioritising the interests of those who are not like them.

Jem Whiteley

Oxford

I played a small part in the work that undermined the Labour government’s ID card proposals. I feel Simon Jenkins misses a vital difference between then and now. Labour’s proposals emerged from a misguided belief that ID cards were a route to improved public services. The current proposals do not have even this veneer of probity. They are rooted in low political cunning that voter ID will disproportionately deter prospective Labour voters.

An essential element of the earlier opposition was the libertarian wing of the Conservative party; I found myself with unfamiliar allies. There is little sign so far that this faction will place principled opposition to infringement of individual freedom above party advantage. Without them, the chances of a successful derailment of these plans are much diminished. Jenkins is right that these proposals are about power – but not so much state power, as he describes, but party power: the aphrodisiac of politicians.

Mike Cushman

London

ID card proposals, together with talk of changing mayoral elections to first-past-the-post voting, giving greater freedom to a prime minister to call a general election and reducing the length of the election period, show a government trying to change democratic processes for its own political advantage. It should be opposed strongly.

Martin Willey

Buxton, Derbyshire

As a joint French-British citizen, I have experience of voting with and without photo ID. In France, it is a legal requirement to carry ID at all times. As such, my identity card is always with me; my identity and my right to vote are inseparable.

New UK voting procedures will divide subjects between those who already possess ID (passport or driving licence), and those who must apply to vote. This turns the act of voting into a choice, rather than a fundamental right. Voting is the cornerstone of all democracies. How, then, is it possible to enforce photo ID for voters in a country whose citizens are not obliged to carry any?
Eleanor Martindale
Canet-en-Roussillon, France

Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Luxury bags take over the World Cup: style, status symbol, or just showing off?
UK Parliamentary Committee Launches Inquiry Into Falling Primary School Rolls and Public Service Impact
UK House of Lords Debates Electoral Commission Powers and Political Finance Reform
UK Parliament Considers Expanding Carbon Rules to International Aviation and Shipping Emissions
UK Traffic Commissioner Revokes Hampshire Haulage Operator Licence Over Regulatory Failures
UK Parliament Examines Risks in Public Contracts Awarded to Technology Firm Palantir
UK Competition Watchdog Moves Toward More Flexible Merger Rules to Support Efficiency and Growth
UK Government Seeks Approval for £1.15 Trillion Public Spending Plan Amid Scrutiny Over Department Budgets
UK Parliament Debates Sweeping National Security and Steel Industry Nationalisation Bills
UK Government Issues Formal Apology for Historic Forced Adoption Practices and Announces £4 Million Support Scheme
UK DEFENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STRATEGY TILTS TOWARD SOVEREIGN CAPABILITY AND INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT
UK ECONOMIC POLICY OUTLOOK SHAPED BY LEADERSHIP TRANSITION AND FISCAL SIGNALS
STERLING STRENGTHENS AMID SHIFTING MONETARY OUTLOOK AND GLOBAL LABOUR MARKET SIGNALS
UK HPV VACCINATION PROGRAM NEARLY ELIMINATES CERVICAL CANCER DEATH RISK IN YOUNG WOMEN
UK EXPANDS PRISON SAFETY REVIEW AS GOVERNMENT SEEKS WIDER SYSTEM REFORM
UK DRIVES DIGITAL ASSETS STRATEGY WITH NEW STABLECOIN REGULATORY MODEL
UK TO EXPAND AI INFRASTRUCTURE THROUGH NEW EUROPEAN TECHNOLOGY PARTNERSHIP
UK LAUNCHES £15 BILLION DEFENCE TECH SHIFT TOWARD ADVANCED MILITARY SYSTEMS
CIVIL SERVICE FACES SHIFT IN POWER STRUCTURE AS REGIONAL GOVERNANCE PLANS EXPAND
WHITEHALL CONSIDERS MAJOR DECENTRALISATION PLAN WITH SECOND GOVERNMENT HUB IN MANCHESTER
UK TARGETS SERVICES EXPORT GROWTH IN TRADE TALKS WITH CHINA AMID GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
POLICE WATCHDOG PROBES OFFICERS OVER HANDCUFFING OF DYING TEENAGER IN HAMPSHIRE CASE
UK REGULATORS UNVEIL DUAL OVERSIGHT FRAMEWORK FOR STABLECOINS AND DIGITAL ASSETS
KEIR STARMER ANNOUNCES £15 BILLION DEFENCE TECHNOLOGY BOOST IN FINAL MAJOR POLICY MOVE
ANDY BURNHAM SIGNALS STRICT FISCAL RULES AS LABOUR LEADERSHIP RACE SHAPES MARKET OUTLOOK
POUND STERLING HITS ONE-YEAR HIGH AS BANK OF ENGLAND SIGNALS NO IMMINENT RATE CUTS
UK Government Confirms Rejected Asylum Seekers to Remain Amid Enforcement Challenges
UK-China Economic Talks Focus on Services Trade and High-Value Sectors
Buckingham Palace Revamp Plans Unveiled to Modernise Royal and Public Facilities
Two Dead After Light Aircraft Crash in Essex Field, Investigation Underway
Princess Diana Marked at 65 With UK Tributes Reflecting on Her Public Legacy
England Teachers Face New Pay Cap Rules for Academy School Leaders Under Education Reform
Dublin Security Alert Escalates After Stabbing and Reports of Transport Disruption
UK Government Faces Scrutiny Over £10,000 Asylum Living Cost Contribution Requirement
England Prepares World Cup Knockout Match Against Democratic Republic of Congo
Northern Rail Project Warned of HS2-Style Cost Risks by UK Parliamentary Committee
UK Tightens Asylum Rules as Most Rejected Applicants Expected to Remain in Country
UK Heat Health Alert Issued as Temperatures Expected to Exceed 30°C Across England
Halifax Brand to Disappear From UK High Streets in Lloyds Banking Group Restructuring
England Teachers Receive 6.6 Percent Pay Rise Over Two Years as Schools Warn of Budget Strain
UK Defence Spending Plan Sparks Budget Clash as Regional Infrastructure Projects Face Pressure
Inquest Continues in Northern Ireland into Death of Noah Donohoe in Belfast
UK Travel Industry Calls for Suspension of New EU Border System During Peak Holiday Season
Telegraph Media Group Acquired by German Media Firm in £575 Million Deal Completion
House of Commons Warns Northern Rail Upgrade Risks Repeating High-Speed 2 Cost Overruns
UK Transport Unions Warn of Summer Strike Action Over Pay Disputes
UK Health Secretary Calls Maternity Care Review a “Watershed Moment” for NHS Reform
Nigel Farage Faces Questions Over £270,000 Payment Linked to Gold Marketing Firm
Labour Government Faces Internal Division Over North Sea Oil and Gas Policy Direction
National Screening Committee Invites New Proposals for UK Health Screening Programmes
×