 The European Digital Identity Wallet should enable citizens to prove their identity, including while on the move, so they can access online public administration services, swap digital documents or just attest a personal identity attribute, such as age. And they can do this without disclosing their identity or other personal data. We spoke to the EPP-COR rapporteur, Mark Weinmeister, Secretary of State for European Affairs, land of Hesse, Germany. If we want to do some administrative operation like registering another car or apply for planning permission, wherever we need ID, we have a better person and if we do that, what's particularly important is that anybody who uses this possibility decides how much data he or she wants to make available. A European Digital Identity would facilitate the right of every person eligible for a national ID card to have a digital identity that is recognised anywhere in the EU, a simple and safe way to control how much information you want to share with services that require sharing of information, identity online and offline, store and exchange information provided by governments such as name, surname, date of birth, nationality, store and exchange the information provided by trusted private sources, use the information as confirmation of the right to reside, to work or to study in a certain member state. What do you think about the European Digital Identity?