ID cards by stealth

I had my supicions, then noticed a bit more. Earlier today I
dug up a few more leads
. Then it came from the horse’s mouth. Charles Clarke’s speech to the European Parliament from this morning. The key quote:

“we argue that internationally consistent and coherent biometric data should be an automatic part of our visas, passports and identity cards where we have them – and would even suggest driving licences as well”

The government knows it can’t get this legislation through by conventional means. So they’re going to force it on us using the EU. In one swoop they bypass parliament, Gordon Brown’s financial objections, and can pass all blame onto Brussels when people start complaining.

Enter mode: rant.

Apparently the reason some people are wary of the EU is that it “does not appear to give sufficient priority to offering practical solutions which make a difference to some of the issues of greatest concern” – namely EEEVIL TERRORISTS, organised crime and asylum seekers. Let’s ignore the fact that people have been wary of the concept of the EU since its inception, shall we? And while we’re at it ignore that the original concept was economic, not judicial… Done? Excellent! Now that we’ve constructed a false history we can make that fiction fit our arguments. Hurrah!

These issues can, argues Clarke, “be used by poisonous demagogues to undermine the very democracy which has in some cases so recently been created.” By, for example, providing excuses for detention without trial, the collation of vast amounts of personal data on individuals by the state, the abuse of the voting system to perpetrate fraud via the post and secure a parliamentary majority on the votes of just 22% of the electorate, and the execution of innocent men on mere circumstantial evidence without any attempt at an arrest, let alone a trial. Hurrah!

And so Clarke confounds with truth: “in our globalised world no single country can tackle these problems alone, even in their own country”. Eh? That makes sense. He’s up to something… Ah – a couple of paragraphs on – it’s political point-scoring against (unspecified) isolationist parties – which can only really mean UKIP, Veritas and the BNP in the UK. Are they that much of a threat to Labour? Hmmm…

And then: “The second principle that must underlie our approach is to strengthen the foundation of practical and pragmatic police and intelligence work” – “pragmatic” eh? What, precisely, does the Safety Elephant mean by that, exactly? Fears begin to bubble to the surface again… I always thought pragmatism was based on facts and an understanding of cause and effect – for example, if you don’t know for a fact that someone is a terrorist, you don’t shoot them in the head – for you realise that the effect may be detrimental to the overall counter-terrorism operation. You acknowledge that your own actions may have acted as a catalyst to an existing situation, and wonder how the effect of that new cause can be lessened. Is Charlie going to announce the end to shoot-to-kill and a bold new government strategy for calming the situation in Iraq? I can’t quite put my finger on why, but I doubt it…

He then, of course, brings up the European Arrest Warrant as a practical, pragmatic approach. Yet fails to mention it has been struck down as unconstitutional in Germany and that it retains serious flaws (as in a British citizen could be forcibly extradited to, say, France to face trial in French courts with no right to first have a hearing in Britain to determine the validity of the charges). He also brings up the need for “cross-border prosecutions” – perhaps thanks to that terrorist chappie fighting extradition from Italy – which he seems to be doing fairly successfully in spite of the European Arrest Warrant, it must be said…

“But it is the third principle which I believe poses the greatest challenge in its modern application. That principle is that we need to use intelligence effectively and intelligently to target, track down, identify and convict the criminals who through terrorist violence and committing serious and organised crime threaten the security and strength of our society.”

So, despite earlier hints that the data retention proposals were going to be proposed as all about organised crime with terrorism as an added bonus, now Charlie’s lumping terrorists in with other criminals – fair enough, to an extent, but another new shift in the Blair government’s approach on this one.

“Of course criminals and terrorists use modern technology: the internet and mobile communications to plan and carry out their activities. We can only effectively contest them if we know what they are communicating. Without that knowledge we are fighting them with both hands tied behind our backs.”

And they’re all probably paedophiles too! The interweb’s full of criminals, terrorists and paedophiles! Hey – why stop at the internet – these devious criminals and terrorists can utilise the postal service to send each other – *shudder* – LETTERS! We need to open every letter and parcel to be really sure! And carrier pigeons! How can we be certain that the birds in Trafalgar Square aren’t the sinister tools of a vast network of EEEEVIL TERRORISTS?

“This is not a sterile debate about principles but about practical measures to contest criminality and out opponents.

“Practical measures, eh? Collecting and storing every phone call, text message, email and history of website visits of all 450 million people in the EU is a practical measure now, is it? Having the already overstretched intelligence services having to search through all that incomprehensively vast quantity of information on the off-chance that they can identify a criminal group or terror cell is a practical measure now, is it? I know technology’s come on immensely in recent years, but methinks Mr Clarke is either somewhat optimistic or simply a fucking idiot if he truly believes that.

But data retention’s not all. As predicted, Clarke’s trying to get ID cards in through the back door:

“That is why we argue that internationally consistent and coherent biometric data should be an automatic part of our visas, passports and identity cards where we have them – and would even suggest driving licences as well.”

This, Clarke admits, “can only be achieved through international agreements, particularly in the European Union” – because he knows all too well that they’ll never be able to pass the kinds of measures they want through the British parliament, or get them past the suspicious Chancellor, nervous of the insanely vast cost of this hare-brained and intrusive scheme.

But how can he possibly do this when “we now possess many hard-fought rights such as the right to privacy, the right to property, the right to free speech and the right to life”? Well simple – it’s not the people trying to compile data on every part of our lives and pry into every aspect of our daily communication. It’s not the people who want to lock us up without trial and who have ordered shoot-to-kill policies without telling us. Oh no – according to Clarke: “Those rights are actively threatened by criminals and terrorists.” Of course! It’s not the government that’s actively trying to destory our freedoms, just the people who want to rob or kill us.

Clarke then agrees that “In making these judgements we need to reflect in each case on the balance between the civil liberty being effected and the increased security being achieved to ensure any changes we make to the status quo are proportionate and reasonable.” Well, Charlie boy, I can answer that one – no, no they are NOT proportionate and reasonable.

Giving the state the power to pry into my personal email correspondance, to track my location via mobile phone, to record my phone calls and pry into my billing information without the express permission of a court of law based on the submission of evidence that I may be a threat, but merely on the whim of a random official is most certainly not anything like reasonable. Trawling through everyone’s personal correspondance JUST IN CASE they may be up to something dodgy grants the state a position akin to omnipotence, a power that is simply too great. Yet it will not be omnipotence, because there will remain areas into which the government cannot pry. And those will be the areas to which the professed target groups – the criminals and terrorists – will retreat.

And for the record, Mr Clarke, your claim that this “will not lead to the mass surveillance of our citizens and unnecessary invasion of their right to privacy” is one that you give no guarantees of other than your word. And the word of a politician (as John Humphrys rightly pointed out) is not to be trusted. Or did we forget the manifesto promise not to introduce university tuition fees already? Even if the current government has no plans to abuse this new-found, vast power, who’s to say future governments won’t?

And finally he goes on to attack human rights. After all, the right not to be tortured is only a minor right in the grand scheme of things:

“Our strengthening of human rights needs to acknowledge a truth which we should all accept, that the right to be protected from torture and ill-treatment must be considered side by side with the right to be protected from the death and destruction caused by indiscriminate terrorism”

Christ… The fact that he then goes on to talk about “safety and security under the law” simply shows how much contempt he has for everyone listening – namely the democratically-elected Members of the European Parliament whose views will likely be ignored as soon as Clarke, Blair and co can secure an international agreement via other sources.

And he ends with the wonderful conclusion – as yet to my knowledge not proposed by any other source as it’s so fucking stupid – that the French and Dutch no votes in their constitutional referenda were due to a desire for greater police powers in the struggle against international terrorism. Because, you know, any other explanation wouldn’t fit the current agenda – which is why they’ve dropped the previous line that the “No” votes were due to a dislike of the EU budget and Common Agricultural Policy…

Fucking ANGER. Apologies for lack of sense/rage etc – rattled off from the top of my head while reading through the damn thing. I dislike Charles Clarke intensely, and this government more and more by the day. Come on, Tories/Lib Dems, sort yourselves out. We need someone to take these fuckers to task over this. We need a proper sodding opposition to these dangerous, ill-thinking bastards, and we need one now. They can’t be allowed to get away with slipping this through from overseas. We need demands for Commons votes, and we need the Labour backbenches to be mobilised in opposition to this dangerous, expensive and useless attempt to turn the state into the biggest peeping Tom of all time.

In short: Gah.

(Initially posted at Europhobia)

15 comments
  1. jultra said:

    Very good analysis, I’ve put a link to this article up.

    We are waist-deep into dangerous waters where the current goverment are literally serving an altogether different agenda, one that makes them an enemy of free people to put it mildly. There is no doubt about that at all in my mind.

    The ideas of mass data retention, global ID etc are such disgusting abominations, it’s almost impossible to imagine any goverment proposing them. It is sick and this path New Labour are on needs to end, and end fast.

  2. seanT said:

    But NM, you’re meant to be pro-EU, and Charles Clarke is (very) pro-EU, and he’s just using the kind of half-truths and special pleading and post hoc justifications and downright LIES that pro-Europeans have always used to muscle through decisions that no sovereign parliament would ever accept on a free vote.

    What price your measured pro-Europeanism, now? Look who you go to bed with. Yes, the fat lying fuck, Charles Clarke. Hope its fun, and he gets a good grip on your sideburns.

    The reason Clarke is so good at this kind of egregious and pustulent mendacity is precisely because he is a pro-european and closet Federast.
    These guys are used to arguing like this, they’ve been doing it for fifty years. C’est son metier.

  3. I can but say: I agree!

  4. Jarndyce said:

    seanT: I must confess, this is pretty hard to swallow as a fellow pro-EUer to Nose. My pro-EUness has always been as much idealism as practicality, but this pushes it beyond the limit. What’s interesting is that they are even side-stepping the EP, the tiny vestige of democracy at the rotten heart…

  5. The thing is, this is little to do with the EU, merely the Blair government. They profess to be pro-EU, but by abusing the system like this they’re actually showing nothing but contempt for both it and the British parliament, and ensuring that (if this tactic gets wider publicity, which I doubt) the British people will become even more suspicious of the EU and even more disinclined to trust politicians or the political process.

    It’s much the same tactic as they’ve used with the Parliament Act and House of Lords (1949-1999 Parliament Act used five times; 1999-2004 Parliament Act used three times) – abuse systems which normally work perfectly well by finding loopholes and routes intended for entirely other purposes to force through legislation which, even with their huge majority, they can’t get through parliament by conventional means.

    The EU, in this case, is a fairly benign tool – if it wasn’t that, it’d be other methods – hence Blair’s recent cozying up to that bastion of human rights and freedom that is China to gain their support at the UN for abolishing the “don’t deport people to be tortured” rule. And they’ll probably still try and get it through parliament and then use the Parliament Act again in a couple of years after the Lords do their best to hold it up.

    Blaming the EU for this is much like blaming the knife that has stabbed you, rather than the person who was weilding it. (And, in any case, it hasn’t happend – yet. Hence the need for wide publicity to discourage them from pursuing this utterly dishonourable course.)

  6. Oh, also worth pointing out that the data retention stuff is a Mcguffin. The amount of data they are proposing to store (on 450 million people) is simply not currently possible in a workable form and would cost the earth. I suspect that the aim is to get everyone saying that it’s not feasible, then offer the lesser storage needs of biometric ID as a “compromise”, despite that being the aim all along.

    The only thing I don’t understand is why they’ve got their little hearts so set on ID? It makes no sense whatsoever to spend such a vast amount of money on something which has no real practical use. None of the arguments they’ve put forward actually work if you look at them for thirty seconds, so what the hell are they up to?

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  8. Jarndyce said:

    The thing is, this is little to do with the EU, merely the Blair government….The EU, in this case, is a fairly benign tool

    Trouble is, though, that in theory at least the EU can be used for these sorts of purposes. Now, of course, so can plenty of other non-transparent tricks-of-the-political-trade, point taken, but it doesn’t mean that if this goes through that the very existence of this route is not itself a problem. Close ’em all (as far as is practical), on an entirely equal opportunities basis, of course.

  9. Jamie K said:

    Sean T
    “The reason Clarke is so good at this kind of egregious and pustulent mendacity is precisely because he is a pro-european and closet Federast.”

    This is exactly backwards. The EU, amongst other things, gives national politicians the chance to do things by the dark of the moon that they couldn’t do otherwise. Europe is the way it is because national politicians make it so. If it’s a sellout you’re looking for, you don;t need to go higher than national level.

  10. Andrew said:

    The only thing I don’t understand is why they’ve got their little hearts so set on ID?

    Because in spite of all the spin, they genuinely believe they know best, and are doing the right thing. They just don’t think they can sell it, which is why they’re doing it by stealth (c.f. every other bloody Blairite reform…).

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