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Controversial ID cards have support of 53 per cent of Canadians: Study

Gregory Bonnell - CP
November 15, 2006

Police State Related - Canadians to need ID card, Stockwell Day says

The controversial idea of Canadians carrying a national identification card that bears their personal information has the support of more than half the country, a new study of public attitudes towards privacy suggests.

The cards - strongly opposed by privacy commissioners and civil libertarians despite calls for their use in the wake of the 9-11 terror attacks - are considered a good idea by 53 per cent of Canadians, according to a study released Monday by Queen's University.

Still, 48 per cent of the study's 1,001 Canadian respondents expressed concern that post-9-11 laws aimed at protecting national security are too intrusive - exposing a Canadian public "polarized" on issues of privacy, said one of the researchers behind the study.

"It's a hotbed topic," said Linda Harling-Stalker, a post-doctoral fellow at Queen's.

"The thing that we're really pointing out is the connection to anti-terrorism laws as it relates to your sense of a breach of personal information."

The study, which looked at how 9,000 people in eight countries view surveillance and privacy, found Americans even more wary of post-9-11 legislation than Canadians.

The margin of error for the Canadian respondents portion of the study was plus or minus 3.1 per cent.

While 48 per cent of respondents in Canada felt such laws intrude on their privacy, that number rose to 57 per cent in the United States.

Although the United States is working on an ID card, only 44 per cent of Americans agreed with the idea.

The global move toward ID cards makes the argument against them moot, said Denis Coderre, the former immigration minister who spearheaded the campaign to bring them to Canada.

"You have over 176 countries right now with a national ID card," said Coderre, who called the Conservative government "short-sighted" for suggesting an ID card program would be too expensive.

"The government won't have any choice, because at the end of the day it will be imposed by international standards."

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