


Britain is trying to create a digital identity system, again
One more heave
When sir keir starmer announced on September 26th that Britain would introduce a national digital-identity system, he might have expected a lukewarm, even an enthusiastic response. Think-tanks had written reports arguing that Britons were strongly in favour of the idea. And the prime minister invoked the great anxiety of the day. A digital-identity system would prevent illegal working and thereby reduce Britain’s appeal to illicit migrants, he said.
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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Pixels, please”

From the October 4th 2025 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
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Why Jews feel increasingly unsafe in Britain
An attack on a Manchester synagogue follows a resurgence in antisemitism

A $2bn AI unicorn tests London’s nerve
Synthesia is Britain’s biggest generative-AI firm. Can the country keep it?

Labour has decided to stop punching its own voters
Sir Keir Starmer has embraced peace and love of the party’s hippy base
Sir Keir Starmer declares a battle for the soul of Britain
The Labour Party takes aim at Nigel Farage and Reform UK
The gold of County Tyrone shows Britain’s barriers to development
Despite the central government’s wish to get digging, a potentially lucrative gold mine remains stuck
Britain’s strict new curbs on junk-food marketing
Will they work?