Using illegal immigration as the catalyst, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is reportedly set to mandate digital ID in the UK while the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change claims 62 percent of Britons are in favor of digital identity schemes.
British media is awash today with the news that by Friday the UK government will be announcing a compulsory digital identity scheme for all adult Britons.
“A well-designed, modern digital-ID system can disrupt the drivers of illegal migration, making it harder to work or reside in the UK unlawfully”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
“Most recently, the debate over digital ID has been dominated by its potential to help reduce illegal migration inflows and address public concerns that the government has lost control of Britain’s borders”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
On Wednesday, the the Blair Institute published a paper called “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works” that also uses people’s frustration about illegal immigration as a main reason to mandate digital IDs.
The report also highlights a Blair Institute-sponsored survey conducted by Yonder Consulting that claims the majority of people in the country are in favor of this scheme.
However, when looking at the Yonder survey data, it never asks those surveyed if they would be in favor of digital ID being “compulsory” or “mandatory” — those words don’t exist anywhere in the data.
“A digital ID ‘superapp’ should become the government’s flagship project – a symbol of tangible change and the Reimagined State in action”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
“Far from reflecting the ‘papers, please’ caricature of an ID card, digital ID is the foundation of a new system that brings fairness, control and convenience to people’s everyday interactions with each other and with the state”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
Most of the questions in the survey don’t even mention digital ID, but rather ask respondents how they would feel about a “government app” that could help with things like fixing potholes, if technology could be useful for government services, who they were voting for, if they watched the news, and what they thought about immigration before finally asking: to what extent would you now support or oppose the UK introducing a digital ID system?
Participants were never asked if they were in favor of mandatory digital ID schemes, only if they supported “introducing” such systems.
“Public-opinion research commissioned by the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI), published for the first time in this paper, shows that digital ID enjoys majority support among the British public, with 62 percent in favor and just 19 percent opposed”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
Here are the actual questions from the YONDER survey:
A digital identity doesn’t have to be required or mandated to address any of the questions in the Blair-sponsored Yonder survey.
Nevertheless, the takeaway from the 12 survey questions is that “digital ID enjoys majority support among the British public, with 62 per cent in favor and just 19 per cent opposed.”
“Contrary to prevailing perceptions, the survey found strong, majority public support across Britain for the introduction of a digital-ID system. After the data-sharing implications and public-policy applications of digital ID are presented, 62 percent support the idea, compared with just 19 percent who oppose it”
Tony Blair Institute, “Time for Digital ID: A New Consensus for a State That Works,” September 2025
“This digital identity determines what products, services and information we can access – or, conversely, what is closed off to us“
WEF, “Identity in a Digital World: A new chapter in the social contract,” September 2018
Illegal immigration is the Trojan Horse of choice to deliver compulsory digital ID in the UK.
With the push for mandatory digital ID schemes being years in the making, open border policies make a lot of sense when you think in terms of the infamous strategy of problem-reaction-solution.
You have something you want to implement (the solution), so you create a problem that gets a reaction from the public, so that they beg you for the solution you wanted to implement in the first place.
Illegal immigration is just what is hot in the public’s attention right now, so that’s the excuse the current administration is going with — striking hard at the right moment after years of waiting — true to its Fabian roots.
And the agenda to rollout digital ID is indeed a long time coming: COVID, climate, CBDCs, conflict, cybersecurity, convenience — take your pick — there’s always a digital ID plot for any given reason.
Digital IDs can go from being convenient to quickly turning into tools for tyranny at any moment.
All it takes is a perceived threat, a declaration of emergency, or something as simple as a new administration in charge, and your digital ID can be used to shut you up online, shut you out of your bank account, shut you down in business, and shut you off from participating in many aspects of society if you don’t comply with whatever rules, laws, or terms of services are currently in place.
Disagreeing with medical intervention mandates, carbon footprint tracking, or the accepted narratives on climate change, foreign conflicts, or elections could all be flagged in your digital identity, thus affecting your level of access to information, goods, and services.
As yours truly first warned nearly five years ago here on The Sociable, “Your digital identity can be used against you in the event of a great reset.”
When incentivization fails, coercion and force are ready to take its place.
Image Source: AI generated with Grok
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