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Edition of 16:00 CETWednesday, June 17, 2026
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Geopolitics & PoliticsWednesday, June 17, 2026

Italy Shelves Paper ID Deadline as Europe’s Digital Identity Projects Stall

Rome extends validity of old-style identity cards indefinitely, while Switzerland’s e-ID faces delays and the EU’s biometric border system risks temporary suspension.

The Italian government has abruptly reversed its plan to invalidate all paper identity cards by 3 August 2026, a decision that spares millions of citizens a bureaucratic scramble and exposes the practical difficulties of digitising foundational identity documents. Following a cabinet meeting in mid-June, Rome announced that the old-style paper cards will remain valid until their individual expiry dates, even if that falls years beyond the original cut-off. The move was framed as a necessary corrective after municipal offices across Italy struggled to issue the electronic Carta d’Identità Elettronica (CIE) quickly enough to meet the deadline, which had been set by an interior ministry circular in February.

The Italian retreat is not an isolated case. Viewed from Brussels, the European Union’s own ambitious digital border project, the Entry-Exit System (EES), is encountering severe teething troubles. The system, which requires non-EU travellers to register biometric data upon first entry into the Schengen Area, has already produced queues of up to six hours at airports in Portugal, Spain and Italy. Frontex, the EU border agency, has confirmed that member states may temporarily suspend the EES this summer if wait times become unmanageable—a contingency that underscores the gap between policy design and operational reality.

In Switzerland, a parallel saga is unfolding. The federal government’s electronic identity scheme (E-ID), once slated for launch this autumn, has been pushed back to 2027 at the earliest. The delay stems in part from a serious data protection flaw involving the use of the national social security number, reviving memories of the 2021 referendum in which Swiss voters rejected an earlier, privately managed E-ID model over privacy fears. Analysts in Zurich note that the Swiss experience illustrates a broader European tension: the desire for seamless digital credentials collides with deeply rooted concerns about state surveillance and data security.

The Italian paper ID extension, while pragmatic, leaves unanswered questions about the document’s acceptance for cross-border travel. Under Schengen rules, passports and national identity cards used for travel must be valid for at least three months beyond the intended departure date and have been issued within the previous ten years. Italian authorities have not clarified whether the old paper cards, which lack the security features of the CIE, will be honoured by other member states for travel purposes. For now, the government has indicated the extension applies primarily to domestic interactions with public administration and service providers, and municipalities may issue provisional paper documents while citizens await their electronic replacements.

Taken together, these developments reveal a continent-wide reckoning with the pace of digital transformation. The Italian volte-face, the Swiss delay and the EU’s border system contingency plans all point to the same lesson: transitioning foundational identity infrastructure requires not only technological readiness but also administrative capacity and public trust. As governments push forward with digital identity schemes, the coming months will test whether they can align ambition with the messy realities of implementation.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

21%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa europea continentaleStampa latinoamericana
Stampa europea continentale/ mediterranea
pragmatismodistacco

The Italian government has extended the validity of paper identity cards beyond August 3, 2026, effectively canceling the previous hard deadline. Citizens will not need to rush to replace their documents, which remain valid until their natural expiration, while municipalities may issue temporary IDs pending the electronic version. The reversal came after slow issuance of electronic cards made the mandatory switch impractical.

Stampa latinoamericana/ mercato
allarmeurgenza

Latin American authorities are tightening enforcement of ID rules: in Mexico, the INE will destroy voter credentials not picked up on time, forcing citizens to restart the process. Meanwhile, foreign ministries warn that a valid passport may not be enough for travel if it lacks the required three to six months of extra validity beyond the departure date from the Schengen area. Failure to comply could result in denied boarding or entry.

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Upd. 02:40 PM1 language · 11 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
11 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Italy Shelves Paper ID Deadline as Europe’s Digital Identity Projects Stall

Rome extends validity of old-style identity cards indefinitely, while Switzerland’s e-ID faces delays and the EU’s biometric border system risks temporary suspension.

The Italian government has abruptly reversed its plan to invalidate all paper identity cards by 3 August 2026, a decision that spares millions of citizens a bureaucratic scramble and exposes the practical difficulties of digitising foundational identity documents. Following a cabinet meeting in mid-June, Rome announced that the old-style paper cards will remain valid until their individual expiry dates, even if that falls years beyond the original cut-off. The move was framed as a necessary corrective after municipal offices across Italy struggled to issue the electronic Carta d’Identità Elettronica (CIE) quickly enough to meet the deadline, which had been set by an interior ministry circular in February.

The Italian retreat is not an isolated case. Viewed from Brussels, the European Union’s own ambitious digital border project, the Entry-Exit System (EES), is encountering severe teething troubles. The system, which requires non-EU travellers to register biometric data upon first entry into the Schengen Area, has already produced queues of up to six hours at airports in Portugal, Spain and Italy. Frontex, the EU border agency, has confirmed that member states may temporarily suspend the EES this summer if wait times become unmanageable—a contingency that underscores the gap between policy design and operational reality.

In Switzerland, a parallel saga is unfolding. The federal government’s electronic identity scheme (E-ID), once slated for launch this autumn, has been pushed back to 2027 at the earliest. The delay stems in part from a serious data protection flaw involving the use of the national social security number, reviving memories of the 2021 referendum in which Swiss voters rejected an earlier, privately managed E-ID model over privacy fears. Analysts in Zurich note that the Swiss experience illustrates a broader European tension: the desire for seamless digital credentials collides with deeply rooted concerns about state surveillance and data security.

The Italian paper ID extension, while pragmatic, leaves unanswered questions about the document’s acceptance for cross-border travel. Under Schengen rules, passports and national identity cards used for travel must be valid for at least three months beyond the intended departure date and have been issued within the previous ten years. Italian authorities have not clarified whether the old paper cards, which lack the security features of the CIE, will be honoured by other member states for travel purposes. For now, the government has indicated the extension applies primarily to domestic interactions with public administration and service providers, and municipalities may issue provisional paper documents while citizens await their electronic replacements.

Taken together, these developments reveal a continent-wide reckoning with the pace of digital transformation. The Italian volte-face, the Swiss delay and the EU’s border system contingency plans all point to the same lesson: transitioning foundational identity infrastructure requires not only technological readiness but also administrative capacity and public trust. As governments push forward with digital identity schemes, the coming months will test whether they can align ambition with the messy realities of implementation.

Source divergence

Geopolitics & Politics · 11 outlets · 1 language

21%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral88%
Critical12%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa europea continentaleStampa latinoamericana
Stampa europea continentale/ mediterranea
pragmatismodistacco

The Italian government has extended the validity of paper identity cards beyond August 3, 2026, effectively canceling the previous hard deadline. Citizens will not need to rush to replace their documents, which remain valid until their natural expiration, while municipalities may issue temporary IDs pending the electronic version. The reversal came after slow issuance of electronic cards made the mandatory switch impractical.

Stampa latinoamericana/ mercato
allarmeurgenza

Latin American authorities are tightening enforcement of ID rules: in Mexico, the INE will destroy voter credentials not picked up on time, forcing citizens to restart the process. Meanwhile, foreign ministries warn that a valid passport may not be enough for travel if it lacks the required three to six months of extra validity beyond the departure date from the Schengen area. Failure to comply could result in denied boarding or entry.

This story appeared in

11 outlets · 1 language

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