London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Wednesday, Jul 08, 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
Federal Financial Framework Shifts as Treasury Launches Universal Savings Program for Minors
Jet2 Reports Strong Summer Travel Demand as Bookings Rise Seven Percent
Prince Harry Loses High Court Privacy Case Against Daily Mail Publisher
British Universities Warn Against Potential European Union Tuition Fee Changes
Heal Fertility Clinic Investigated After Embryo Biopsy Sample Mix-Up
Resolution Foundation Warns Regional Income Divide Has Barely Improved Since 1997
British Markets Remain Cautious as Middle East Tensions Rise and Government Transition Nears
Andy Burnham Poised to Become United Kingdom Prime Minister in Expected Political Transition
Nigel Farage Resigns as Member of Parliament Ahead of By-Election Amid Funding Investigation
Trump Declares Iran Ceasefire Over After Renewed Attacks on United States Bases
French Court Allows Le Pen to Run for Presidency, but with an Electronic Tag: "I Will Appeal, and I Will Run"
$1.4 Trillion: The Lawsuit That Could Crush Meta
Europe's Growing Struggle with Extreme Heat and Air Conditioning
UK Daily Briefing: Legal Developments and Social Issues
Political Turmoil and Rising Costs
Anthropic Reengineers Agentic Architecture to Shift Autonomous Workplace Automation to the Cloud
Logic Flaw in Windows 11 Permission Architecture Silently Consumes Hundreds of Gigabytes of Local Storage
Apple Advances Late-Stage Operating Systems with Fourth Beta Deployments
Global Crisis Alert: Escalating Middle East Tensions and UK Political Upheaval
UK Parliament Pushes for Greater Domestic Control Over Critical Technologies
UK Parliament Warns Trade Fair and Exhibition Industry Is Losing Global Competitiveness
Police Launch Murder Investigation After Mother and Two Children Found Dead Near Bedford
British Chambers of Commerce Survey Shows Business Confidence Falls to Post-Pandemic Low
UK Parliament Report Warns Britain Risks Falling Behind in Artificial Intelligence Sovereignty
Office for Budget Responsibility Warns United Kingdom Faces Long-Term Fiscal Pressures
Nigel Farage Resigns as Member of Parliament Amid Financial Scrutiny and Triggers By-Election
Deep Purple Has Released Its Best Album in Decades
UK MPs Criticise Student Loan System as Potentially Mis-Sold to Millions of Borrowers
Policy Groups Propose Bank of England-Backed Solar Loan Scheme for Millions of Homes
UK Health Agency Issues Amber Heat Alerts Across Six Regions as Temperatures Rise
Royal Air Force F-35 Jets Conduct First High North Air Policing Missions From Aircraft Carrier
Major UK Companies Join Government Cybersecurity Pledge Amid Rising Digital Threats
UK Sanctions Russian Operatives Linked to Chemical Weapons Programmes and Poisoning Cases
UK Government Expands Free Breakfast Clubs and Limits School Uniform Costs
UK Water Companies Face Tougher Penalties Under New Environmental Enforcement Rules
UK Universities Warn Funding Cuts Could Damage Skills Pipeline and Economic Growth
NHS Expands Artificial Intelligence Tools to Help Reduce Patient Waiting Lists
NHS Ombudsman Criticises Failures in End-of-Life Communication and Patient Care
NHS Launches Nationwide Vaccination Drive After Rise in Measles Cases
UK Government Introduces New Limits on Foreign-Linked Political Donations
Thames Water Creditors Advance £10 Billion Rescue Plan to Prevent Potential Public Ownership
Andy Burnham Prepares Labour Leadership Platform as Party Faces Post-Starmer Transition
UK Met Office Issues Heatwave Alerts for London and Southern England
Keir Starmer Blocks Earlier World Cup Kick-Off Time for England Match Against Mexico
NHS Digital Transformation and Media Consolidation Highlight UK Policy Priorities
UK Government Pushes Digital Trade Rules to Cut Export Costs for Businesses
Bank of England Plans Leverage Rule Changes to Support Government Bond Market
UK Police Operation Targets Organised Immigration Crime Networks With Hundreds of Arrests
Yvette Cooper Calls for Global AI Rules to Prevent Security Risks
NHS Begins Major AI Expansion Through £10 Billion Digital Investment Programme
×