A new website for people to pledge their opposition to a possible second Scottish independence referendum has been launched by Labour.
The party's Scottish leader Kezia Dugdale unveiled the move as she vowed she would "work tirelessly" to keep the country in the UK if there is a second vote on the future of the Union.
By entering their details on the website TogetherStronger.scot, the party said people could pledge their opposition to a second independence referendum and "join the fight for a stronger Scotland inside a reformed UK".
With Scottish Labour having now endorsed Ms Dugdale's vision for a federal UK, she also announced she will join forces with former prime minister Gordon Brown and others to look at how Labour can take forward plans for a People's Constitutional Convention - which will look at how power is distributed across the nations and regions of the UK.
Ms Dugdale declared: "The Labour Party I lead will never support independence."
She insisted leaving the UK would not be "an escape from Tory rule" at Westminster or from Brexit - saying instead it is "the same old song that the SNP has been singing for decades".
In September 2014 Scots voted by 55% to 45% to stay in the United Kingdom, with Ms Dugdale saying the referendum then shook her "to the core".
The referendum campaign was "physically and emotionally exhausting" Ms Dugdale said, and "divided our country"
Addressing the Scottish Labour conference in Perth she pledged: "If this country faces another referendum at any point in the future, I will work tirelessly to make sure that our side of the argument is successful again.
"That is why today I am announcing the launch of TogetherStronger.scot and asking everyone who shares Labour's vision of a strong Scotland inside a reformed UK to sign up."
Ms Dugdale urged Scots: "If you believe our country is already divided enough, and if you believe the First Minister should shelve her plans for a second independence referendum, then join us."
The Scottish Labour leader also used her speech to call for an increase in child benefit payments for families north of the border, saying such a move could help remove tens of thousands of youngsters from poverty.
New welfare powers that have been devolved to Holyrood allow it to "top up" existing benefits, with Labour calling for this to rise gradually, so that by 2021 it is worth £240 a year more to parents.
Labour will push the Scottish Government to include this measure in its Child Poverty Bill.
But Ms Dugdale said: "If they won't do it, we will seek to amend the law ourselves".
Parents currently receive £1,076 a year in child benefit for their first child, but Labour's proposals would see this rise to £1,316 a year by 2021.
"Our plan would mean help for the majority of families across Scotland and would mean 18,000 fewer children living in poverty in the first year and up to 30,000 once these changes are fully implemented," Ms Dugdale said.
"It would mean starting to reverse the fall in the value of child benefit that families have seen over the past five years.
"And it would send a strong message that Scotland will not allow hard-working families to bear the brunt of Brexit."
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