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Government claims that withdrawal of PSC could be illegal as it sets up battle with data watchdog

A long-awaited probe into the legality of the card was published this evening.

THE DEPARTMENT OF Employment Affairs and Social Protection will continue to process personal data related to the Public Services Card (PSC), saying it has a “strong legal basis” to do so.

The department has this evening published a long-awaited report by the Data Protection Commissioner (DPC), which last month found that there is no legal basis for a person to be required to get a PSC for anything other than social welfare payments and benefits.

Data Protection Commissioner Helen Dixon also ordered the government to immediately stop processing data for services outside of the department’s remit.

But in a statement accompanying the report’s publication, the department said that Minister Regina Doherty and the Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe had informed the Government that they are satisfied that such processing is legal.

It also said that both ministers believe withdrawing or modifying the PSC or the data processes that underpin its use would be inappropriate and “potentially unlawful”, and that their opinions had been informed by advice from the Office of the Attorney General.

In comments accompanying the statement, Doherty said that she was publishing the report in the interests of transparency and to provide further context to the controversy, including recent correspondence between the department and the DPC about the report.

The Minister said:

While we respect the office of the DPC, in this instance based on strong legal advice, we cannot agree with the findings contained within this report.
We have strong legal advice that the existing social welfare legislation provides a robust legal basis for my Department to issue PSCs for use by a number of bodies across the public sector.

Report published

The PSC was first introduced back in 2011, when 4,000 cards were issued in a pilot project. By 2019, over 3 million of them had been created. 

The government said the card would increase efficiency in delivering public services, and help to tackle social welfare fraud. But as the government sought to expand the card’s requirement for other public services, the DPC launched a report into the legality of doing so.

The completed probe first outlined last month how there is no legal basis for any department or state body, except for the Department of Social Protection, to insist that citizens obtain a PSC to access a public service they provide.

It also finds that the Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection has no legal right to retain supporting documents, such as utility bills, which are collected during the PSC registration process.

And it criticises the department for not being sufficiently transparent in terms of the personal data it has processed in relation to the PSC.

In her foreword to the report, Data Protection Commissioner Helen Dixon noted that the PSC’s use is an arrangement that requires the processing of “significant volumes of personal data” from Irish citizens, and underpins important decisions to be taken about those citizens.

She warned that, as a result of this data processing, the PSC’s use was an arrangement that gave rise to potentially adverse consequences for those who used it:

Accordingly, it is of critical importance that an arrangement of this scale and importance is established on a proper legal footing… and that it operates in a fair and transparent manner in accordance with core data protection principles.

The report is also highly critical of the government for claiming that the card enables individuals to access public services more easily, and said that the PSC is not equipped to do so for the most part.

To highlight this, the commission pointed out that the National Transport Authority was the only body, aside from the department, which has successfully integrated its technology onto the PSC, with customers able to use it to access free public transport instead of a Leap card.

It said that the form of card issued by the department serves “little purpose”, because no public sector body is capable of reading it for the purposes of delivering public services.

Alcohol sales

Meanwhile, the DPC also expressed concerns about the potential for “function creep” in relation to the use of the PSC.

The report highlights how the card has already evolved from its original purpose, and is now being used as a form of photo ID to enable people to access other services.

Said the commission:

Equally, the card is now moving from being one that strictly required for use in the context of transactions with specified public sector bodies, to one that… may, in the near future, be used as an Age Card to be presented in off-licences to purchase alcohol.

The commission warned that this was a significant shift in the evolution of and rationale for the PSC, and said there had been little debate as to whether this was a positive development or whether there was legal basis for such use of the card.

Elsewhere, the DPC wrote that the ongoing change in policy and direction in relation to the PSC had led to a “very fragmented and insufficient underpinning of the PSC in terms of its legal basis”.

The report outlines how the 2005 Social Welfare Consolidation Act is cited by the department as the main piece of legislation which underpins the legality of the PSC and the SAFE registration standard.

However, the DPC notes that one of the provisions of the 2005 Act which is key to the PSC – Section 263 – has been amended six times by three different pieces of primary legislation.

The commission also notes that Section 241, also seen as important to the PSC project, has been amended 28 times by 11 enactments.

The report says:

It is the view of the DPC that the piecemeal and fragmented nature of the legislative interventions described in the preceding paragraph cannot but impact – adversely – on the coherence, credibility and sustainability of the legal foundations on which the PSC sits…

Court proceedings

In a statement to TheJournal.ie this evening, Graham Doyle of the Data Protection Commission welcomed the publication of the report.

“As previously stated, the process of preparation of the enforcement notice is now underway,” he said.

The report’s publication follows weeks of speculation as to whether it would be made public at all.

Following its delivery to the Department, Dixon ordered the Minister to publish the report within seven days, but Doherty said she would wait to discuss its findings first.

Following the delivery of the report last month, the DPC also announced that it would proceed with enforcement action over the government’s refusal to comply with its recommendations.

The government previously announced that it would appeal the findings of the report, although Doherty subsequently said she wanted to meet with Dixon before challenging the matter in court.

In further comments this evening, the Minister suggested such a meeting never took place.

“My officials did seek to engage further with the DPC on this matter but regrettably that engagement was not possible and therefore we are publishing the report without any further delay,” she said.

The Department added that as a result of potential court proceedings in relation to the report, it would not comment further.

With reporting from Sinead O’Carroll and Sean Murray.

Want to know where it all went wrong with the PSC? Was this inevitable or could it have been avoided? Sinéad O’Carroll and reporter Sean Murray were on joined on The Explainer last week by solicitor Simon McGarr, director of Data Compliance Europe. You can find out all you need to know about the controversy below:


The Explainer / SoundCloud

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    Mute Sea Graham
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:52 PM

    Lads. You messed up, spent loads of money, didn’t do your proper research, created a lemon. If nothing our government is consistent.

    365
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    Mute Robert Phelan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:36 PM

    @Sea Graham: more waste of tax payers money this FF FG government are a shambles no accountability..

    211
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    Mute tommytukamomo
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:39 PM

    @Sea Graham:
    I genuinly didn’t expect anything less from this government.
    To call them utterly incompetent could not even begin to describe them.

    106
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    Mute Dave Walsh
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:22 PM

    @Robert Phelan: someone’s aunt owns the company that prints them….

    23
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    Mute Commentator
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:51 PM

    @Dave Walsh: Auntie Smurfit

    8
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    Mute Ken Oath
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:48 PM

    Glad I don’t have one and since this controversy- won’t be getting one.

    150
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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:52 PM

    @Ken Oath: I have had one for a few years. I’m not sure what the fuss is about tbh.

    83
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    Mute Ich bin brendan
    Favourite Ich bin brendan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:24 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: ask the data commissioner, after all they’re experts, it’s why it was set up. Your “personal experience” means nothing.

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    Mute Ashling Fenton
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:42 PM

    @Ken Oath: Our PPS could just be (and probably is) on our passports.

    11
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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:12 PM

    @Ich bin brendan: I’m not fussed on the card or its applications. I haven’t read the report, as I’m sure you haven’t. I think the card is a good idea. If the central issue is gdpr compliance then it can and should be remedied. Overall though the card is a good idea.

    22
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    Mute Ken Oath
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:15 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: the dpc is there to protect individuals/consumers data against organisations, companies, tech giants etc who are as a whole – much bigger than one person. The dpc is very much on our side and when it flags up that our government are stepping out of line with how they use our information that they deem ‘necessary’ for public services it raises big concerns.

    86
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    Mute Nuala Mc Namara
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:52 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: You should start reading the Report,by page 6,you’ll change your opinion about ‘the card’s.
    It has 172 pages,so far I’ve read 24pages,very interesting!

    40
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    Mute Ich bin brendan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:13 PM

    @Chin Feeyin: political agenda, no shame in you flouting yours, you’re forever in the frape room. Her report calls your masters out for what they are, bullsh!tters, not that changes week by week. The sooner yer gone, the better we will be.

    25
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    Mute Jim O Brien - TechBuzz Ireland
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:41 PM

    The arrogance and ignorance is mind boggling and if anyone heard regina on the radio today it is just WOW.

    168
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    Mute Johnny Comelately
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:28 PM

    @Jim O Brien – TechBuzz Ireland: This from a person who has billions in a budget but still could not run a micky mouse company

    72
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    Mute Alan Watts
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:08 PM

    Regina Doherty needs to step down

    115
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    Mute Diogenes
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:42 PM

    Compensation for people who had to give up their private data?

    81
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    Mute Chin Feeyin
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:39 PM

    @Diogenes: unlikely. No judge would go for it.

    6
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    Mute Hans Vos
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:51 PM

    @Chin Feeyin: try Nolan. With h you never know)

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    Mute Hans Vos
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:52 PM

    @Hans Vos:

    1
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    Mute Hans Vos
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:54 PM

    @Chin Feeyin: try Judge Nolan. With him you never know. :)

    8
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    Mute Diogenes
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:45 PM

    @Chin Feeyin: Why?

    6
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    Mute Willy Mc Bride
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:36 PM

    Their publishing the report in the name of transparency.
    ..

    So so funny :-) LOL …

    77
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    Mute dick dastardly
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:07 PM

    They have already wasted 7 million euro of taxpayers money on legal fees over fighting the apple tax,how more million are they prepare to blow on this

    81
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    Mute John Hartigan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:44 PM

    Boots on the street

    66
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    Mute Craic_a_tower
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:48 PM

    @John Hartigan: they are on Grafton Street and in the Jervis centre

    21
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    Mute Mick Costello
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    Sep 17th 2019, 6:50 PM

    Potentially unlawful as opposed to being unlawful in the first instance

    61
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    Mute SFNutters
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:31 PM

    @Mick Costello: it’s all just opinions…a Court will have to decide.

    6
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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:52 PM

    I’d love to know what efforts the Dept. officials made to meet with the Data Protection Commissioner and if she rejected their request for a meeting. Can’t understand why two state bodies cannot work together. Something does not add up here. We are only reading one side of the story.

    41
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    Mute Robert Rusk
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:58 PM

    @John O’Neill: its all right there in the report …

    13
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    Mute Michael Patrick Newell
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:38 PM

    Folks, you messed up, brought in a card without even bothering to check any of the legal stuff associated with such an act, made ur mates lots of money via contracts and no doubt a few kick backs……and now the chickens have come home to roost. Just give this crap up and get rid of this, heck we know the taxpayer will be picking up the tab either way and we know nobody will he held accountable since the FFG cartel have shown to skip over certain laws…..

    118
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    Mute TamuMassif2019
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:15 PM

    FG is saying in other words, From my dead cold hands… Why is it need and what is it for, please explain you wasters in the Dail?

    44
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    Mute McGregor Pub Lad
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:59 PM

    Government rules the court ruling that says this illegal invasion of privacy is illegal.

    32
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    Mute SFNutters
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:32 PM

    @McGregor Pub Lad: there is no court ruling.

    11
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    Mute Stevie Doran
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:25 PM

    Hahaha thank god I never got one

    30
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    Mute Stephen Kearon
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    Sep 17th 2019, 7:52 PM

    There is nothing wrong with the idea of Public Service Cards, as anything that protects against fraud, especially welfare fraud is to be welcomed. The sensible option is to now pass the legislation required to make PSC fully compliant with data protection and fix the implementation screw up by the FG led Govt

    30
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    Mute The Risen
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:20 PM

    @Stephen Kearon: Change the law instead of your unlawful behaviour, how very fianna fail….

    72
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    Mute Stephen Kearon
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:15 PM

    @The Risen: says an anonymous coward who supports IRA terrorist trash

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    Mute Nuala Mc Namara
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:29 PM

    @Stephen Kearon: Welfare fraud is less than 0.1%,so bit silly to use that to unfairly tar/target the other 99.9%!!

    28
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    Mute Stephen Kearon
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:42 PM

    @Nuala Mc Namara: Prime Time investigates put it at 10%, also regardless of the %, anything that prevents it is welcome

    6
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    Mute jamesdecay
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:36 PM

    @Stephen Kearon: preventing fraud seems reasonable although the suggested savings so far are negligible in comparison to the millions spent on the card.

    But why for driving licenses or passports? Or other services? Why the serious mission creep without proper debate and legislation?

    And why, when the body you set up to manage data protection – the DPC – tell you this all wrong, you fight them in court? At our expense?

    23
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    Mute Nuala Mc Namara
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:57 PM

    @Stephen Kearon: Journal did a Fackcheck in 2017 :’ Did the Government really save €500 due to welfare fraud’ which they said was false.The €500m they said would have been saved equated to 3%.fraud.

    12
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    Mute feargal de cantuin
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:58 PM

    Blah blah blah so it’s ok to break the law says government. Defending the indefensible then?

    28
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    Mute Albert Brennerman
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:30 PM

    Advice advice advice. If your so sure of it take it to the courts.

    13
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    Mute Gearóid ÓCiaráin
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:00 PM

    The one on the card looks a bit young for free travel as shown on her card! Scam ?

    20
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    Mute Alan Watts
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:12 PM

    @Gearóid ÓCiaráin: why can only old people have mental disabilities?

    12
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    Mute Gearóid ÓCiaráin
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    Sep 17th 2019, 8:22 PM

    @Alan Watts: Oh ! Thought free travel was entirely age related.

    3
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    Mute Una Nolan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:33 PM

    This is just more money for the Judges; total waste of tax payers money yet again.The system appears to be corrupt,No 1 takes responsibility for their actions.BAR the taxpayer

    16
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    Mute Camacsaint
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:55 PM

    And Pat Rabbite was lashed for paying €26 million on the surprisingly useful Eircode system.

    11
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    Mute Margaret Kane
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    Sep 17th 2019, 9:43 PM

    FG government is a disgrace and FF is no better

    24
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    Mute Camacsaint
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:56 PM

    @Margaret Kane: it’s the FGFF government. I agree they are both muck.

    12
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    Mute Leo Lalor
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    Sep 18th 2019, 3:09 AM

    Face saving exercise. bring in the spin doctors leo.

    6
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    Mute Anastasia
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:10 AM

    Why didn’t the ask the data protection commission first a big mistake which cost lost of monies sad sad

    6
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    Mute Una Nolan
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    Sep 17th 2019, 10:21 PM

    This is just more money for the Judges; total waste of tax payers money yet again.The system appears to be corrupt,No 1 takes responsibility for their actions.BAR the taxpayer.

    8
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    Mute Daniel Mulcahy
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    Sep 17th 2019, 11:26 PM

    I got 1 for paternity leave. Was not an issue. I still don’t see an issue why we would need one to get access to state services. Am I missing something?

    3
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    Mute Dave Doyle
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    Sep 18th 2019, 6:59 AM

    @Daniel Mulcahy: Read up on how the Indian National ID Card, the Aadhaar card is illegally being abused by the Indian government. It has placed every Indian citizen under the most draconian and intrusive surveillance. The PSC is made by the same company that makes the Aadhaar card, made for the exact same stated purpose.
    To bring in such an instrument into Ireland and making it mandatory to use, the government is assuming that every citizen in Ireland has criminal intent towards the state. There is no legal basis for this card, the database being compiled on everyone is illegal.
    The UK government went about investigating bringing in a National ID Card into the UK. After spending Billions on it they gave up. Such were the legal and constitutional complexities surrounding bringing in such a card, they were seen as being insurmountable. Were due process used to bring in a Biometric National ID Card into Ireland the legal and constitutional issues would be no less complex. By bringing in a Biometric National ID Card into Ireland, calling it a “PSC” the FG minority government was and have circumvented all due process to do so.

    9
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