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Just In Time For Independence Day, A Renewed Call For A National ID Card

Chris Calabrese,
Legislative Counsel, 老澳门开奖结果 Washington Legislative Office
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July 3, 2012

Leading yesterday鈥檚 New York Times op-ed page is a column by Bill Keller, . It supports the faulty claim that we can solve our nation鈥檚 immigration woes if we just create a national ID system, and it specifically lauds a 2010 proposal by Sens. Schumer and Graham to create a biometric social security card that would function as a national ID for every American.

This idea is so painfully wrong and would do so much harm to Americans鈥 freedom that it鈥檚 hard to know where to begin to take it apart. Let鈥檚 start with the fact that a national ID won鈥檛 stop the numerous employers who actually undocumented workers because they can threaten such workers with deportation for reporting underpayment or terrible working conditions. They are already violating the law and existing rules and they don鈥檛 care about identification at all.

Additionally, it does little for employers who do pay attention to documentation鈥攊t just . But even if we put that aside for a moment and accept that there might be some small sliver of employers who will be dissuaded from hiring undocumented workers by a new biometric ID system, it鈥檚 not clear why we should take such a drastic step for minimal effect.

In order to get at that very small number of employers, America would need to pay a very high price - about $40 billion (yes with a 鈥渂,鈥 and that鈥檚 just to get the system running). That is the that researchers at the University of California Berkeley Law School put on the Schumer/Graham proposal. It鈥檚 not hard to understand why that number is so huge when you think about everything that a national ID entails. A system must be built whereby everyone reports to a Social Security office, lines up with a birth certificate and other paperwork, is fingerprinted and photographed and then issued a biometric card (yes, a biometric ID requires the fingerprinting of every American). Now add the cost to employers for readers to check the cards and connect with the ID system to make sure they are accurate. It鈥檚 an enormous undertaking. Imagine a combination of the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Transportation Security Administration.

Once the country builds this mammoth system, do we really believe it will remain limited to employment? The history of the social security number strongly suggests it will not. For years, those cards stated on their face 鈥渇or Social Security and tax purposes -- .鈥 That has not stopped anyone -- from credit card companies to employers to government -- from asking for that magic nine-digit number in order to verify identity.

Social security numbers are also a prime target for identity thieves and it鈥檚 safe to assume that your national ID would be an even more inviting target. If you鈥檝e ever had to recover from having your identity stolen, imagine how bad it would be if a thief stole your national ID, perhaps by paying a to issue a real card with someone else鈥檚 biometrics. If a national ID card were the central identity document in a person鈥檚 life, imagine how hard that would be to recover from that type of ID theft.

Worse, building a national ID system creates enormous potential for legal mischief. America already has a terrorist watch list that contains more than a million names, including many people who are barred from enjoying basic freedoms including the right to fly. Imagine government watch lists combined with inevitable mission creep. The pieces already exist to create a system where Americans would not be able to work, fly, vote or carry a gun unless their national ID is in order.

And as Arizona鈥檚 SB 1070 law demonstrates, some legislators are itching to expand that even further in service of an anti-immigrant agenda. If these legislators got their way, every aspect of life, including wholly innocent interactions with government officials and police officers, would require you to produce your national ID and prove your identity to avoid being treated as an 鈥渋llegal alien.鈥 One example of how this policy has already started to take shape: under Alabama鈥檚 anti-immigrant law, a passenger in a car who was not suspected of any wrongdoing was arrested (and charged, absurdly, with 鈥渄riving without a license鈥) because he did not have acceptable ID.

This isn鈥檛 a partisan issue. In 1981, at the outset of the Reagan administration, then-Attorney General William French Smith argued that a national worker ID would be necessary to stop illegal immigration. At a cabinet meeting another member jokingly suggested that it would be easier simply to tattoo an identification number on everyone. President Reagan then exclaimed, 鈥淢y God! That鈥檚 the mark of the beast,鈥 effectively .

The idea surfaced again within the Clinton administration鈥檚 ill-fated national health care system proposal, in the form of a national medical ID card for every American. Critics at the time feared the plan would create a comprehensive database of everyone鈥檚 medical history. Invoking George Orwell, President Clinton himself acknowledged that 鈥渁ny kind of identification card like that sort of .鈥

Keller quotes me as calling a national ID 鈥渁 tool of social control,鈥 and that鈥檚 what it is. It has been rejected by the right and the left because at its heart it鈥檚 a permission slip. A requirement that each of us gain approval from the government before enjoying what should be our fundamental right to work, to travel and to participate in American life. Ultimately a national ID card鈥檚 failure as an immigration control measure is beside the point. Its potential success鈥攊n curtailing our liberties and controlling our movements鈥攊s why it must be rejected.

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