Tony Blair, Larry Ellison & Israel lobby behind UK Digital ID #BritCard & plan to OWN YOU @MollyBBM

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Is the tech giant who gave Blair £257m in line for huge ID card contract? Government embroiled in cronyism row after revelation former PM lobbied for his billionaire backer who could make millions

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The Government was tonight embroiled in a cronyism row as it emerged Tony Blair secretly lobbied for his billionaire backer who could make millions of pounds from Labour's controversial digital ID cards.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15140649/tech-giant-Blair-257m-ID-card-contract.html

Documents seen by The Mail on Sunday reveal the former prime minister urged Business Secretary Peter Kyle to consult a technology institute founded by his friend Larry Ellison in a private meeting last year.

Mr Ellison, the world's second richest man, has donated or pledged a staggering £257million for the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change.

He founded the Ellison Institute of Technology (EIT), a research centre in Oxford, and is chairman of tech giant Oracle, which has a £700million IT deal with four Whitehall departments.

Experts say Oracle is now in pole position to profit from plans to force millions of adults to sign up for a digital ID card.

And an exclusive MoS analysis can reveal that after Sir Tony's meeting with Mr Kyle, Mr Ellison's organisations have enjoyed astonishing access to the very top of Government.

Indeed, staff from Oracle and EIT have met with ministers and senior officials no fewer than 29 times in nine months.

Mr Kyle, Health Secretary Wes Streeting and Chancellor Rachel Reeves have met bosses from Oracle.

Meanwhile science minister Lord Vallance has met EIT representatives seven times – one was to discuss 'EIT plans for expansion and alignment with Government's priorities', official records show.

Sir Tony has had a decades-long 'bromance' with Mr Ellison, who is worth £290billion, and last year enjoyed a lavish Mediterranean holiday on his superyacht.

On Saturday, Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said: 'Despite Keir Starmer's promises of a 'crackdown on cronyism', these revelations show it runs right to the very top of this rotten Labour Government.

'Tony Blair lobbying Peter Kyle to set up meetings with groups linked to Larry Ellison – now in pole position for the Government's Digital ID contract – reeks of a blatant conflict of interest. This has all the hallmarks of yet another cosy deal between Labour insiders and powerful vested interests.'

Official papers released under Freedom of Information laws show Sir Tony met Mr Kyle, then technology secretary, at the former PM's London office on September 12, 2024.

During the meeting Sir Tony 'noted the work of the Ellison Institute... and recommended that SoS [Secretary of State Peter Kyle] sought a briefing on their work', according to official civil service minutes obtained by investigative website Democracy for Sale. He highlighted how the institute could become 'an excellent resource'.

The documents show an official at Mr Kyle's Department for Science, Innovation and Technology was instructed to 'look at how we should engage' with the institute. Sir Tony is among a 'faculty of fellows' at EIT, whose campus in Oxford is due to be completed in 2027.

The papers also show that Sir Tony asked the cabinet minister 'where he could support the department' and highlighted the huge cost savings that digital identity cards could bring.

'TB noted that the Indian Government had saved $15 billion in fraudulent costs using digital ID,' the minutes of the meeting state.

On Saturday, representatives for Sir Tony said that in the meeting he discussed 'the investment Larry Ellison is making in science and technology in the UK'.

Keir Starmer last week provoked a backlash after announcing that anyone who wants to work in the UK will need a digital ID card.

Sir Tony has long championed the policy and his think-tank told the MoS on Saturday that the roll-out would 'boost the British economy'.

But civil liberties groups have warned it risks creating 'a dystopian nightmare', while a petition against the plan on Saturday passed 1.6million signatures.

Tech experts believe Oracle, a giant database and software firm co-founded by Ellison in 1977, could gain commercially from the introduction of the scheme.

It is understood the ID cards will rely on a huge 'Right to Work' database that is estimated to cost between £150m to £400m.

Oracle already has a series of major NHS technology contracts and provides so-called cloud competing services for the Home Office, Department of Work and Pensions, Ministry of Justice and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in a deal worth up to £1bn.

The firm landed a further tech contract with the Home Office worth £53million last week, government documents reveal.

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