This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/scotland/7060888.stm
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 5 | Version 6 |
---|---|
Concession on 'new' police plans | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The Scottish Government has conceded that its plans to boost police numbers will not come from taking on new officers alone. | The Scottish Government has conceded that its plans to boost police numbers will not come from taking on new officers alone. |
Opposition leaders accused the SNP of misleading voters after ministers said they would boost capacity by the "equivalent" of 1,000 extra officers. | Opposition leaders accused the SNP of misleading voters after ministers said they would boost capacity by the "equivalent" of 1,000 extra officers. |
The minority government was defeated in the Scottish Parliament over the plans. | |
First Minister Alex Salmond confirmed the rise would be in recruitment, retention and redeployment. | First Minister Alex Salmond confirmed the rise would be in recruitment, retention and redeployment. |
Labour leader Wendy Alexander accused Mr Salmond of misquoting his own party manifesto - which set out plans in its first budget for "1,000 more police" - in a previous exchange with her over police numbers. | Labour leader Wendy Alexander accused Mr Salmond of misquoting his own party manifesto - which set out plans in its first budget for "1,000 more police" - in a previous exchange with her over police numbers. |
As soon as we recruit the first police officer, that will be one more than the Labour Party promised in the election campaign Alex SalmondFirst minister | |
The government subsequently promised the "equivalent" of this number. | The government subsequently promised the "equivalent" of this number. |
"The word 'equivalent' does not appear in this section of the manifesto," said Ms Alexander during First Minister's Questions. | |
Mr Salmond said plans for police recruitment would be set out in the 14 November budget, adding: "We will deliver an additional 1,000 police officers in our communities through increased recruitment, improved retention and redeployment. | Mr Salmond said plans for police recruitment would be set out in the 14 November budget, adding: "We will deliver an additional 1,000 police officers in our communities through increased recruitment, improved retention and redeployment. |
"As soon as we recruit the first police officer, that will be one more than the Labour Party promised in the election campaign." | "As soon as we recruit the first police officer, that will be one more than the Labour Party promised in the election campaign." |
The Scottish Government was defeated at Holyrood after the concerns were raised in a Conservative-led debate and backed by Labour and the Liberal Democrats. | |
The Tory motion passed by parliament expressed serious concern over an "apparent dilution" of an SNP commitment. | |
Conservative leader Annabel Goldie said Mr Salmond had broken a "cast iron" policing promise, asking: "Will he now come clean, admit that the SNP cannot be trusted and that he has betrayed the public and he has betrayed our police? | |
"He promised 1,000 extra police. Scotland currently has 16,261 officers, so when we will we have 17,261 officers? | "He promised 1,000 extra police. Scotland currently has 16,261 officers, so when we will we have 17,261 officers? |
"Or is the truth really that, under the SNP, the answer is never?" | |
The first minister said that at one time the Tories were in favour of the "three Rs", adding: "I think Annabel should back our plans for recruitment, retention and redeployment of our officers to make the streets of Scotland safer." |