The conservative party has promised to increase protection of privacy and cut back on government databases, if it wins the next election.
Government databases cost too much and erode people’s civil liberties, said the shadow justice secretary, Dominic Grieve, in a policy paper entitled Reversing the Rise of the Surveillance State.
The announcement follows months in which the party leader David Cameron has proposed cutting costs by putting National Health Service data into the hands of private companies such as Google, plans which were condemned as “mad” by Tory MP and privacy advocate David Davis.
Grieve’s promises include scrapping the Government’s proposals for ID cards, introducing a Bill of Rights, and restricting council’s powers to snoop under the Regulation of Investigative Powers Act (RIPA), to the investigation of serious crimes only.
“As we have seen time and time again, over-reliance on the database state is a poor substitute for the human judgment and care essential to the delivery of frontline public services,” said Grieve. “Labour’s surveillance state has exposed the public to greater – not less – risk.”
The full 11 points issued at the launch are as follows.
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