ID cards scheme has cost nearly £50m
![zd-defaultauthor-andy-mccue.jpg](https://www.zdnet.com/a/img/resize/90352c34588b25f3ea21cb1a17c23345f41e622d/2014/12/04/8fc072d9-7b62-11e4-9a74-d4ae52e95e57/zd-defaultauthor-andy-mccue.jpg?auto=webp&fit=crop&frame=1&height=192&width=192)
The Government has revealed it has spent almost £50m on the controversial ID cards scheme before the project is even off the ground.
In a written answer to a parliamentary question by Liberal Democrat MP Lembit Öpik, the Home Office said £46.4m had been spent on the ID cards scheme up to the end of May 2006 since the start of the financial year 2003/2004.
Öpik called it a "catastrophic waste of taxpayers' money" and said the £46.4m spent to date could have been better used to pay for more than 150 new police officers for 10 years.
He said: "This is real money wasted on an unworkable scheme which won't achieve what the Government claims."
Prime Minister Tony Blair said earlier this month ID cards will be a central plank of Labour's next election manifesto, despite delays in putting the identity cards contracts out to tender and leaked memos from a senior official at the Home Office claiming the project is heading for disaster with a lack of clear benefits to demonstrate a return on the investment.