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Scottish Labour to vote on Trident renewal | Scottish Labour to vote on Trident renewal |
(35 minutes later) | |
Scottish Labour is voting on whether to call for the UK's Trident nuclear missile system to be scrapped. | |
A motion opposing the renewal of Trident has been debated by delegates at the party's conference in Perth. | |
The main UK party as a whole currently backs replacing the country's nuclear deterrent, which is based at Faslane on the Clyde. | The main UK party as a whole currently backs replacing the country's nuclear deterrent, which is based at Faslane on the Clyde. |
Members are expected to vote against renewal, in a move supported by UK leader Jeremy Corbyn. | Members are expected to vote against renewal, in a move supported by UK leader Jeremy Corbyn. |
The results of the vote are expected after 13:00. | |
Follow @BBCPhilipSim on Twitter for the latest from the debate. | Follow @BBCPhilipSim on Twitter for the latest from the debate. |
Mr Corbyn's backing for unilateral disarmament puts him at odds with Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale, who instead supports the removal of nuclear weapons on a multilateral basis. | Mr Corbyn's backing for unilateral disarmament puts him at odds with Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale, who instead supports the removal of nuclear weapons on a multilateral basis. |
But Labour's only surviving Scottish MP insisted the party could have different policies on renewing Trident north and south of the border. | But Labour's only surviving Scottish MP insisted the party could have different policies on renewing Trident north and south of the border. |
Shadow Scottish secretary Ian Murray said moves to make the party in Scotland more autonomous meant it could "have a different position on anything it wants". | Shadow Scottish secretary Ian Murray said moves to make the party in Scotland more autonomous meant it could "have a different position on anything it wants". |
Scottish activists made Trident a priority issue for a policy vote at the conference after it received the most votes of the 17 issues proposed for debate. | Scottish activists made Trident a priority issue for a policy vote at the conference after it received the most votes of the 17 issues proposed for debate. |
Currently trade unions hold 50% of the votes at conference, with the remaining half coming from the Scottish party's 73 constituency parties. | Currently trade unions hold 50% of the votes at conference, with the remaining half coming from the Scottish party's 73 constituency parties. |
Unison, the UK's largest trade union, remains committed to getting rid of the nuclear deterrent. | Unison, the UK's largest trade union, remains committed to getting rid of the nuclear deterrent. |
Davina Rankin from the union told delegates there was no military argument for it and no moral case. | Davina Rankin from the union told delegates there was no military argument for it and no moral case. |
Pat Rafferty, from Unite, which represents Faslane workers, said Trident cannot protect the UK from ISIS or cyberwarfare. | Pat Rafferty, from Unite, which represents Faslane workers, said Trident cannot protect the UK from ISIS or cyberwarfare. |
He said Britain should take lead in nuclear non-proliferation. | He said Britain should take lead in nuclear non-proliferation. |
Mr Rafferty said the argument for non-renewal must go "hand in hand" with a jobs diversification plan and the billions saved from Trident could help workers and be used against a "crisis" in industry and the public sector. | Mr Rafferty said the argument for non-renewal must go "hand in hand" with a jobs diversification plan and the billions saved from Trident could help workers and be used against a "crisis" in industry and the public sector. |
GMB Scotland, which also represents shipyard and defence workers, has made clear its support for renewal. | GMB Scotland, which also represents shipyard and defence workers, has made clear its support for renewal. |
The union's Gary Smith told the conference the "glaring omission" from the debate was what alternative jobs would be for those working on Trident. | The union's Gary Smith told the conference the "glaring omission" from the debate was what alternative jobs would be for those working on Trident. |
Mr Smith said: "This debate is a nonsense and frankly an utter indulgence." | Mr Smith said: "This debate is a nonsense and frankly an utter indulgence." |
He said the GMB was standing against "Alice in Wonderland politics". | He said the GMB was standing against "Alice in Wonderland politics". |
Jackie Baillie, whose Dumbarton constituency includes Faslane, said "13,000 quality, well-paid jobs" relied on the naval base. | Jackie Baillie, whose Dumbarton constituency includes Faslane, said "13,000 quality, well-paid jobs" relied on the naval base. |
She attacked the "Nimbyism on a national scale" of the SNP wanting to move Trident to England. | She attacked the "Nimbyism on a national scale" of the SNP wanting to move Trident to England. |
"We will deal with reality not rhetoric," she said. | "We will deal with reality not rhetoric," she said. |
South of Scotland region MSP Claudia Beamish told delegates there was a firm commitment to protect defence workers' jobs regardless of Trident renewal. | South of Scotland region MSP Claudia Beamish told delegates there was a firm commitment to protect defence workers' jobs regardless of Trident renewal. |
Scottish Labour suffered a devastating defeat in May's general election, with the party losing 40 of its 41 seats to the SNP, which has pledged to remove nuclear weapons from Scottish waters. | Scottish Labour suffered a devastating defeat in May's general election, with the party losing 40 of its 41 seats to the SNP, which has pledged to remove nuclear weapons from Scottish waters. |
Where do the parties stand on Trident renewal? | Where do the parties stand on Trident renewal? |
Conservative leader and Prime Minister David Cameron has always maintained the UK needs to keep its nuclear weapons, calling it as "insurance policy" against attacks. Replacing Trident was a Tory manifesto pledge in the general election. | Conservative leader and Prime Minister David Cameron has always maintained the UK needs to keep its nuclear weapons, calling it as "insurance policy" against attacks. Replacing Trident was a Tory manifesto pledge in the general election. |
Labour has supported Trident renewal, saying it has been a "cornerstone" of peace and security for nearly 50 years - but that policy is now in doubt after the election of long-time opponent Jeremy Corbyn as party leader. He says the issue will form part of their defence review, but has also said that even if there were a replacement system, he would never use them as PM. | Labour has supported Trident renewal, saying it has been a "cornerstone" of peace and security for nearly 50 years - but that policy is now in doubt after the election of long-time opponent Jeremy Corbyn as party leader. He says the issue will form part of their defence review, but has also said that even if there were a replacement system, he would never use them as PM. |
The SNP, which now has 56 MPs in the House of Commons, opposes Trident renewal. During the election campaign it described Trident as "unusable and indefensible - and the plans to renew it are ludicrous on both defence and financial grounds". | The SNP, which now has 56 MPs in the House of Commons, opposes Trident renewal. During the election campaign it described Trident as "unusable and indefensible - and the plans to renew it are ludicrous on both defence and financial grounds". |
The Lib Dems, who insisted on no final decision being taken while they were in coalition, have always been sceptical about a like-for-like replacement and insisted on a value for money review. They back a "step down the nuclear ladder" with a smaller nuclear weapons system providing a "minimal yet credible" deterrent. | The Lib Dems, who insisted on no final decision being taken while they were in coalition, have always been sceptical about a like-for-like replacement and insisted on a value for money review. They back a "step down the nuclear ladder" with a smaller nuclear weapons system providing a "minimal yet credible" deterrent. |
Read more about Trident renewal here | Read more about Trident renewal here |