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Identity Documents Act 2010

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Citation
  
2010 c. 40

Royal assent
  
21 December 2010

Identity Documents Act 2010

Long title
  
An Act to make provision for and in connection with the repeal of the Identity Cards Act 2006.

Introduced by
  
Theresa May (Home Secretary) Baroness Neville-Jones (Home Office Minister)

Territorial extent
  
Whole of the United Kingdom

Commencement
  
Sections 2–3 on 21 December 2010; remaining sections on 21 January 2011

The Identity Documents Act 2010 (c. 40) is an Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom which reverses the introduction of identity cards and requires the destruction of the information held on the National Identity Register.

Contents

As a bill, it was presented to the House of Commons by Home Secretary Theresa May on 26 May 2010, making it the first government bill to be introduced to the 55th Parliament of the United Kingdom by the Cameron ministry.

Parliamentary passage

The government initially aimed to have the bill passed into law by August 2010, but the bill did not make sufficient progress to achieve this. The bill passed the House of Commons on 15 September 2010, and was unopposed by the Opposition. It was introduced to the House of Lords on 5 October 2010 and received its second reading on 18 October 2010 and successfully passed through a Committee of the Whole House without amendment. At report stage on 17 November 2010, however, peers accepted a Labour amendment to pay compensation to people who had already paid the charge to purchase an ID Card. The amendment remained in place until the bill returned to the House of Commons, where it was rejected by the Speaker as it imposed an additional charge on the public purse not authorised by the Commons, which holds financial supremacy over the House of Lords. The Lords accepted the Commons disagreement to their amendment, and the bill received Royal Assent on 21 December 2010.

Provisions

The Act repeals the Identity Cards Act 2006 and requires the destruction of the information held on the National Identity Register. It legislates to:

  • Cancel all existing ID cards within one month of Royal Assent
  • Remove the statutory requirement to issue ID Cards
  • Cancel the National Identity Register
  • Require the destruction of all data held on the Register within one month of Royal Assent
  • Close the Office of the Identity Commissioner
  • Re-enact some criminal offences (possession or use of false identity documents) and certain other measures contained in the Identity Cards Act 2006
  • Although the Act ends the validity of ID cards as travel documents, no action will be taken to withdraw the National Identity Cards already issued.

    References

    Identity Documents Act 2010 Wikipedia