In a major defeat for intrusive digital governance, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has scrapped his controversial plan to make digital ID cards compulsory for workers — a policy widely decried on social platforms like X as a dystopian “Mark of the Beast” scheme.
Sky News reported this evening that the government has abandoned the mandatory requirement for digital identity cards to prove eligibility to work in the UK by 2029, after months of fierce public backlash.
Sky’s live politics update confirmed Starmer’s U-turn — announcing the end of compulsory digital IDs, though the government still aims to use digital verification tools in some form.
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Meanwhile, The Times — traditionally seen as establishment-friendly — acknowledged the reversal outright, saying Starmer is dropping the compulsory part of the scheme following mounting distrust and political pressure.
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And the Guardian bluntly reported that the “digital identity” plan has been scaled back, with the mandatory element now off the table as public and political opposition intensified.

Social Media and Grassroots Outrage Forced the Retreat
Across X and Reddit, opponents of the digital ID seized on the original plan as proof of creeping global control, linking it to biblical “Mark of the Beast” scenarios, warning that mandatory digital identities were a step toward total surveillance and loss of individual rights.
Opposition sentiment also spilled into mainstream debate: a petition against the digital ID campaign garnered millions of signatures last year, with critics from both the left and right calling the scheme intrusive and unnecessary.
Clearly, there is no love lost for Gates in Britain. Watch:
This is what the Great British Public think of Psycho Bill Gates.
— Darren of Plymouth (@DarrenPlymouth) November 30, 2024
First he poisons with vaccines, then the food supply.
He is a murderous eugenicist, he should be arrested and put in prison. pic.twitter.com/zbcRdvAArc
Today’s victory is being framed on X not merely as a political loss for Starmer but as proof that digital ID absolutism can be stopped when enough pressure is applied — from social platforms, grassroots movements, and cross-spectrum public dissent.
Whether this represents a full rollback or just stalling before another attempt remains to be seen. But for now, mandatory digital ID is dead — at least in its compulsory form — and one “markless” win has been secured.

