Tuesday, 03 Jun 2025

Libertarians like Ron Paul warned against REAL ID - is the criticism merited? Experts weigh in

With the REAL ID deadline days away, experts disagree on the balance between privacy and national security, with one telling Fox News Digital the protocol creates a de facto national ID.


Libertarians like Ron Paul warned against REAL ID - is the criticism merited? Experts weigh in

When Congress debated REAL ID in 2005, libertarian Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, strongly opposed the move, positing that it constituted a national ID card that had no limitations on what type of information could be stored on it, posing a significant threat to American civil liberties.

So, should citizens be concerned about getting a REAL ID? Fox News Digital spoke to two policy experts, one supportive and one critical, for their views.

By requiring a REAL ID to fly, Hankinson explained that IDs offered by liberal states to illegal immigrants will no longer allow those illegals to easily move about the country unchecked.  

And while Hankinson acknowledged that concerns about data privacy are legitimate, he pointed out that most Americans already have much of their information stored in databases such as that of the Social Security Administration.

Hankinson said the government will have to be held to the highest standards to uphold citizens' privacy. Still, he compared the risk-reward scenario posed to the nation by REAL ID to nuclear power.  

"If it's done right, you can mitigate the risks, and you can have, like France, 75, 80% of your power from nuclear power plants," he said. "If you cut corners, and you put the wrong people in charge and you take risks, then you end up with Chernobyl."

"REAL ID is a national ID system. And historically, national ID systems have been used for terrible things," he said. "We want to make sure that we don't position ourselves in the United States ever to have that much authority reside with the government. And so, for two decades now, I've been arguing against REAL ID, simple as that."

What is the problem with being entered into a national system? Harper explained that his concern is that setting up such a system treats American citizens as suspects before they have committed any crimes.

"I reject the idea of having law-abiding American citizens put into a national I.D. system because they might be terrorists. That's not the way we do law enforcement in this country, to treat people as suspects from go," he said. "I don't think natural born citizens should, should be put into a national I.D. system for immigration control. That's the that's the problem of illegal immigration being visited on the citizen. That's not how it's supposed to work."

In his view, the "burden" of the reasons for having a national ID "all falls on the citizen, on the individual who's not accused of any crime or any wrongdoing. That's not the way to do it."

Harper predicted that the federal government will ultimately bend on enforcing REAL ID requirements and continue to "kick the can down the road" as they have done for two decades. 

What's more, according to both Hankinson and Harper, citizens in most states will still have other options available to them if they want to opt out of getting a REAL ID.

In the end, the decision of whether to obtain a REAL ID or to accept the risks of not doing so rests with individual citizens. 

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