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I posited that the arguments presented by Keir Starmer's purported Labour government, to supposedly justify the BritCard rollout, coupled with the timing of the announcement, the apparent inability to understand public opinion, and the lack of necessity for the BritCard, indicated that there was something amiss with the so-called government's BritCard proposition.
It seems to me that the purpose of the BritCard gambit is to frame the Overton Window for the public debate about digital ID in the UK.
People can accept or reject it, imagining the BritCard represents the totality of digital ID infrastructure. If the population rejects the BritCard they may well do so under the misapprehension they have defeated digital ID in the UK.
Subsequent developments have strengthened my view.
Digital ID is a global policy initiative that governments around the world, including the British government, are following, not leading.
It is the United Nation's (UN's) Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 16.9 which promises to "by 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration."
Even before the ink was officially dry on SDG 16.9, the ID2020 group, tasked with meeting the "identity" sustainability target, outlined what achieving SDG 16.9 would mean in practical terms:
[C]reate technology-driven public-private partnerships to achieve the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goal of providing legal identity for everyone on the planet.
ID2020 further clarified the global policy objective:
By 2030, enabling access to digital identity for every person on the planet.
The objective of SDG 16.9 is to force not just approved "legal identity" but digital ID on every human being on earth. To this end, the UN has already created a nascent global digital ID database called ID4D. The ID4D Global Dataset aim to capture the data of "all people aged 0 and above."