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Statistics are shown for this demographic

Answer Overview

Response rates from 775 Nova Scotia voters.

53%
Yes
47%
No
53%
Yes
47%
No

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 775 Nova Scotia voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 775 Nova Scotia voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Nova Scotia voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9ZBHJJNfrom British Columbia  answered…2wks2W

Doesn't this technically already exist with the Social Insurance Numbers, and Health numbers, + Passports and stuff?

 @9YKXF76from New Brunswick  answered…2wks2W

as long as its only used on people who have had their identity grabbed and has strict limits to who and when its used

 @9W9YG5Kfrom Nova Scotia  answered…1mo1MO

Leave it to the provinces, and allow each resident to choose the level of security of their ID. Give several options and decentralize, as this is safer.

 @9W9M54Xfrom British Columbia  answered…1mo1MO

Yes however I struggle to see how this could be done without there being invasion of privacy, and this issue should be further discussed before implementing anything.

 @9W6Y4BFfrom Ontario  answered…1mo1MO

I believe it could be good in high-security places however this can also lead to some serious problems if these data files are ever hacked.

 @9X97M66from Nova Scotia  answered…3wks3W

I think we should on high profile people or people with many complaints but overall have privacy for other people

 @9WTF59Rfrom Alberta  answered…4wks4W

No because the odds of that information being given to other countries is pretty high. I’d say yes if I believed Canada could keep the information to itself

 @9WSS4QBfrom Ontario  answered…4wks4W

Yes, only if there is a supervised system to ensure the government does not infringe on individual freedoms. Watch the Watcher.