Digital ID brain trust will meet behind closed doors

Bender1 pts0 comments

Digital ID brain trust will meet behind closed doors as minister ducks cost questions

Jump to main content

Search

REG AD

public sector

Digital ID brain trust will meet behind closed doors as minister ducks cost questions

Minutes will not be published, and MPs still have no answer on the group's budget or how its members were chosen

SA Mathieson

SA<br>Mathieson

Published<br>thu 25 Jun 2026 // 10:20 UTC

The minutes of the government's recently announced digital ID advisory group will not be published, Cabinet Office minister James Frith has told a Conservative MP, while not answering his questions about its budget or how its members were selected.<br>Andrew Snowden, MP for Fylde and an assistant whip, asked the Cabinet Office whether the minutes, recommendations, and advice of the digital ID advisory group announced earlier this month will be published. In separate parliamentary written questions, he also asked what budget the group had been allocated and what criteria were used to select its members, who include security expert David Rogers, Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts, and former New South Wales digital government minister Victor Dominello.

Protesters march in central London in a demonstration opposing the government's digital ID plans several months ago<br>Elena Rostunova/Shutterstock

"The running of the digital ID advisory group will be supported by the Cabinet Office's existing digital ID task force. The group is not a decision-making body and minutes will not be published," said Frith in identical replies to all three questions.

REG AD

"The answer was disappointing to say the least," said Snowden when asked by The Register if he was satisfied with Frith's response. "Digital ID was a deeply controversial policy when Keir Starmer announced it, causing one of the many U-turns that led to the situation we are in today. If the government are persisting with developing a system of digital ID then scrutiny of that policy by Members of Parliament is vital. To ignore key questions will not increase public support for digital ID."

REG AD

Snowden added that written parliamentary questions are an important way to hold the government to account and obtain further information. "When the government refuses to answer questions from Members it is not just us they are disrespecting. They are disrespecting Parliament itself and the people we represent."<br>The digital ID scheme was announced last September at the Labour Party's annual conference by current prime minister Keir Starmer. The conference also heard Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham speaking against the plans. "I think there's a risk of an opportunity cost situation here, where something can consume a huge amount of time and actually doesn't come through," he said.<br>Following his by-election victory last week and Starmer's announcement on Monday that he would resign, Burnham is widely expected to become the UK's next prime minister, which could leave him to decide the fate of an unpopular scheme introduced and championed by his predecessor. ®

public sector

REG AD

personal tech

FOSS dev builds a BASIC compiler using LLVM

Not just any old BASIC, either: OS-9’s BASIC09

Recovery has to keep up with AI

SPONSORED POST: Why an AI-era recovery architecture looks different, with Eon's Gonen Stein

ZTE builds a TCO-optimal AI factory to fuel token economy

PARTNER CONTENT: Leveraging OEX architecture SuperPODs and multi-dimensional co-design to maximize tokens per second and lower total cost of ownership for scaled inference

personal tech

Apple passes RAMpocalypse costs on to consumers

Fondleslab and Mac prices rise by hundreds; phones safe ... for now

Virtualization

Lessons from the VMwars – nothing virtual about the Broadcom vs Tesco slugfest

Never get involved in a land war in Asia. Also, don't pick a contract fight with a monster of the art

PERSONAL TECH

Windows 11 can now turn back the clock when updates go bad

Point-in-time restore offers a 72-hour escape hatch for stricken PCs

MOST POPULAR

Personal tech

India and China are home to 2.9 billion people – and together they bought just 13 million PCs in Q1

Security

Mythos discovers 'Squidbleed,' a memory leak that's gone undetected since Clinton era

CYBER-CRIME

Massive password-stealing attack hits 75k Fortinet firewalls

virtualization

Tesco is sprinting to quit VMware and Broadcom despite rapid migration risks

Security

Why Amazon hates 'human-in-the-loop' AI governance

AI

personal tech

Apple passes RAMpocalypse costs on to consumers

Fondleslab and Mac prices rise by hundreds; phones safe ... for now

PAAS AND IAAS

Amazon pours another $13B into India's AI and cloud infrastructure

Mumbai and Hyderabad datacenter expansion forms part of broader $48B five-year investment pledge

DATABASES

Elastic stretches workforce 7% thinner as AI does more of the heavy lifting

CEO says automation is enabling leaner teams as engineering is split into three core areas

SYSTEMS

IBM stacks up...

digital questions minister group government published

Related Articles