20 May 2010
The new coalition government has promised to give data back to the people in a radical overhaul of public sector databases, surveillance cameras and DNA storage.
The restoration of individuals' privacy was a central campaign of both the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties while in opposition.
Under Labour, the UK became one of the most watched societies in the world. Surveillance was higher than in any other European Union country, and at the same level as Russia and China, according to Privacy International statistics.
Individuals' data was also put at risk by numerous large-scale data losses in the public sector.
Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said in his first official speech as deputy prime minister that the government will "hand power back to the people".
"I'm talking about the most significant programme of empowerment by a British government since the great enfranchisement of the 19th century," he said.
"This government is going to transform our politics so that the state has far less control over you, and you have far more control over the state."
Clegg promised an end to the National Identity Register, second-generation biometric passports and internet and email record storage.
The government will regulate CCTV and the DNA database more closely, and restrict the storage of innocent people's DNA.
As promised in the Conservative and Liberal Democrat manifestos, the government will scrap the ContactPoint children's database, and force schools that take children's fingerprints to obtain parental permission first.
"It is outrageous that decent law-abiding people are regularly treated as if they have something to hide. It has to stop," Clegg said.
"We will end practices that risk making Britain a place where our children grow up so used to their liberty being infringed that they accept it without question."
Clegg also promised to increase British democracy by reviewing libel laws and removing limits on the right to peaceful protest.
Certain actions considered illegal under Labour will be decriminalised, Clegg promised, and the government will introduce a mechanism to block pointless new criminal offences.
"Thousands of criminal offences were created under the previous government. Obsessive lawmaking simply makes criminals out of ordinary people," he said.
"This will be a government that is proud when British citizens stand up against illegitimate advances of the state, that values debate and is unafraid of dissent."
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desktoparchitecture - personal LIBERTY
I live here in the Old Great USA land of the Increasingly Less Free and More Cowardly. We continue to stand by as our Liberties once gained by our Founding Fathers in 1776 at Concord Bridge. I Congratulate Britain upon turning the direction it has to Restore Personal Liberties. President Obama was was elected to to bring about such actions, but he has chosen otherwise. President Obama has talen the course more traveled lately on personal diminishment of personal Liberties. He in his actions both at Home and at War reminds too much of Predident Richard Nixon. Nixon also had both an answer to end the War and desire to control Personal Liberty including Descent
Posted by: desktoparchitecture 25 May 2010
More security not less!
"I'm talking about the most significant programme of empowerment by a British government since the great enfranchisement of the 19th century,? With speeches like that I fear that Nick Clegg is an ally of the criminal classes and taking away CCTV will prevent the hooligan elements that disrupt people?s lives with their drunken behaviour from being caught by the police. With the difficulty that we have in catching the top criminals and drug smugglers, I seriously think that they get protection from members of parliament, top civil servants and the criminal lawyer mob. It is funny how the numbers of Customs Officers and Police numbers are cut just when they are having success at cracking criminal rings. Also for consideration, what of members of parliament who have voted over the years for the lowering of the age of consent to have sex to twelve? They should be checked out and put on the P List. There are far more things of interest to the public than CCTV cameras, honest people do not even think about them and people that are in high crime areas would welcome more of them. Build more uncomfortable prisons and we are more likely to see the crime rates fall. Criminals are anti-social and should not be considered for any benefits from society, until they reform their lives. That is real socialist thinking and the Tories are better at providing for the law abiding than Labour has ever been. The Liberal Democrats should shut up and start learning their craft of running the country for the benefit of all its law-abiding citizens, who pay for everything and I would remind Nick Clegg of that fact. His fancy party is small beer!
Posted by: stephen Mark 20 May 2010