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by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
LONDON (Worthy News) – Every person in Britain could be required to obtain a digital identity card under proposals revived after French President Emmanuel Macron pressed London to curb migration.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer told his Cabinet he would explore the concept as part of reforms to make it harder for illegal migrants to live and work in Britain.
Downing Street confirmed ministers are considering options 15 years after a similar plan was scrapped over civil liberties concerns.
One option would require anyone seeking a job, housing, benefits, or public services to present a digital ID proving the right to live in the country.
Cabinet Office Minister Pat McFadden, who recently studied Estonia’s mandatory digital ID scheme, said replacing “a multiplicity of paper-based documents” made sense.
“The idea you’ve got to prove who you say you are in order to work is a reasonable expectation,” he added.
STARMER UNDER PRESSURE
The ruling Labour Party had rejected ID cards as recently as July, with Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds saying it was “not our approach.”
However, Macron reportedly pressured Starmer to address the “pull factors” drawing migrants across the Channel.
Allies of the French leader have described Britain as an “El Dorado for migrants” due to what they view as lax rules.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair has also lobbied for digital IDs behind the scenes.
Critics warn that the plan risks eroding privacy rights, noting the previous scheme collapsed in 2010 after a public outcry.
The renewed debate comes amid a surge in Channel crossings of nearly 50 percent this year and Labour’s pledge to shut down hundreds of migrant hotels and expand cooperation with France.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Russia has sent a sanctioned cargo ship to resupply its air base in Syria, signaling that Moscow intends to preserve one of its most important military footholds in the Middle East despite the fall of longtime ally Bashar al-Assad, according to U.S. officials and satellite images reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Israel moved another step closer to early elections after the coalition’s bill to dissolve the Knesset passed its first reading late Monday night by a vote of 106-0, with no lawmakers voting against the measure.
President Donald Trump said Monday that Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to halt attacks after a day of rising tensions in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened renewed strikes on Hezbollah’s Dahiyeh stronghold in Beirut if the Iranian-backed terror group continued firing on northern Israel.
A divided federal appeals court ruled Monday that the Trump administration’s policy restricting transgender military service is likely unconstitutional, delivering a legal setback to the Pentagon while leaving parts of the policy in place.
Authorities in Vietnam’s Gia Lai Province have detained two Montagnard Christians on accusations of “undermining national unity” in the latest case involving ethnic minority believers in the communist-run nation, Christians told Worthy News on Monday.
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The U.S. Department of Justice is temporarily backing down from its plan to launch a $1.77 billion “anti-weaponization fund” after a federal judge issued a short-term restraining order.
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