The United Kingdom’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer government has dropped plans to make a centralized digital ID mandatory for workers after months of public backlash. Officials say right-to-work checks will remain required, but the planned digital ID, due around 2029, will be optional alongside other electronic documents (Officials said).
Critics warned the scheme risked centralizing sensitive data and enabling mission creep, citing privacy and security concerns (warned; warned of mission creep). A parliamentary petition opposing digital ID cards drew heavy support (parliamentary petition). (Ed. note: Almost three million people signed the petition.)
Opponents celebrated the policy change online, with Rupert Lowe posting that he was off for “a very large drink to celebrate the demise of mandatory Digital ID” (Rupert Lowe’s post). Nigel Farage called it “a victory for individual liberty against a ghastly, authoritarian government” (Farage’s post).
European policymakers are exploring privacy‑preserving designs, such as zero‑knowledge proofs, to verify attributes without revealing full personal data, and decentralized identity tools aim to avoid single centralized databases. Privacy‑focused crypto tools, including Zcash and Monero, and evolving regulatory tests like the US Treasury’s DeFi ID thinking continue to shape debate on identity and surveillance.

