The Federal Conference Committee (FCC) met on Saturday to review motion submissions and begin finalising the agenda for Spring Conference 2026, which will take place in York from 13 to 15 March 2026. We are very much looking forward to returning to York for what promises to be a busy and engaging Conference.
Motions Submissions and Agenda Planning
As ever, we received a strong and diverse range of submissions, reflecting the breadth of engagement across the party. In total, the FCC received:
- 28 policy motions
- 2 business motions
- 1 constitutional amendment
Following very detailed discussion and several rounds of selection, the FCC agreed to include on the agenda:
- 7 policy motions, including one late-deadline policy motion (see below)
- 1 slot for emergency motion(s)
- 1 constitutional amendment (which was in order and must therefore appear on the agenda)
- 1 business motion.
We are extremely grateful to all members, local parties, and Associated Organisations who took the time to draft and submit motions. The quality and thoughtfulness of submissions were high, which inevitably made the selection process challenging.
Spring Conference is particularly tight on time. Alongside policy debates, there are mandatory business items. As always, we wish we could include more debates, but we have done our best to maximise discussion within the limited time available.
Late Deadline Motion: Trump and the wider world
Given the fast-moving international situation, particularly in relation to the United States / Trump and its actions concerning Venezuela, Greenland and the wider world, the FCC agreed to allow a later deadline for motions concerning the US international relations. We have allocated a 45 minute debate for this.
Motions submitted by the standard deadline would already have been overtaken by events by the time the FCC met – indeed, further developments, including tariffs and statements on Greenland, were announced during the FCC meeting itself, and new announcements continue. The Committee also felt that this subject matter would be better handled as an amendable policy motion, rather than as an Emergency Motion, which is unamendable.