The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

May slaps down SNP and rules out Scottish veto over Brexit

Prime Minister vows to trigger process of UK leaving EU by next March

- Kieran andrews poliTical ediTor kiandrews@thecourier.co.uk

War has broken out between the UK and Scottish government­s after Theresa May ridiculed an SNP threat to block Brexit at Holyrood.

After the Prime Minister announced her intention to trigger Article 50, the legal mechanism which starts the process of Britain quitting the European Union, within five months, Edinburghb­ased Brexit minister Mike Russell said MSPs could halt the process in the Scottish Parliament.

But he was caught in the Tory leader’s crossfire as she addressed her first party conference in charge, who insisted there would be “no opt-out” for any devolved nations, despite Scotland and Northern Ireland voting to remain in Europe.

Mrs May said: “The negotiatio­ns between the United Kingdom and the European Union are the responsibi­lity of the Government and nobody else.

“I have already said that we will consult and work with the devolved administra­tions for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, because we want Brexit to work in the interests of the whole country. And we will do the same with business and municipal leaders across the land.

“But the job of negotiatin­g our new relationsh­ip is the job of the Government. Because we voted in the referendum as one United Kingdom, we will negotiate as one United Kingdom, and we will leave the European Union as one United Kingdom.

“There is no opt-out from Brexit. And I will never allow divisive nationalis­ts to undermine the precious union between the four nations of our United Kingdom.”

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon responded in a tweet: “PM going out of her way to say Scotland’s voice and interests don’t matter. Strange approach from someone who wants to keep UK together.”

Mr Russell argued that Holyrood could use a legislativ­e consent motion, which means Westminste­r would not normally pass any legislatio­n on devolved matters without the Scottish Parliament’s consent, to block Britain quitting the bloc.

But James Chalmers, Regius Professor of Law at Glasgow University, has previously told The Courier that, as it is only a convention, no such threat could be followed through on.

SNP minister Mr Russell told the BBC’s Sunday Politics Scotland: “We need to make sure we are in there discussing these matters.

“On a range of matters from free movement of people to education, we are not hearing that Scotland’s vital interests are being protected.

“At present there is a majority against a Repeal bill. That is absolutely obvious. There have been three votes in the Scottish Parliament in the last four weeks on European matters.

“All of them have been in favour of the single market and issues like that and against what appears to be the current position of the hard Brexiteers who are trying to force Theresa May into their camp.”

Professor Chalmers said: “If Holyrood had a Brexit veto, this would have been a huge issue throughout the referendum campaign. The reason it wasn’t? Because it doesn’t.”

Mrs May said Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty will be triggered in the first three months of 2017, marking the start of the two-year process to enact Brexit.

The process can be extended beyond two years if Britain and all other EU countries unanimousl­y agree, but that prospect is seen as unlikely.

Sir, - The SNP used to stand for progress, or so they said. As a ship with the words “shale gas for progress” unloads vital feedstock for Scotland’s petrochemi­cal industry, we clearly see this has been transcende­d in the naked pursuit of independen­ce “come hell or high water” as one 80-year-old blurted out on a radio phone-in last week.

The SNP announced its fracking moratorium on January 28 2016, the same day as Nicola Sturgeon discussed the opportunit­y with Ineos.

It is widely known in onshore exploratio­n circles that the SNP is in favour of fracking.

What sickens me is the timidity, hypocrisy and incompeten­ce which kicks this can along a road.

It got them through the Westminste­r and Holyrood elections and may be enough to see them past the council elections.

But it will come to a humiliatin­g and economical­ly suicidal dead end when England goes ahead with fracking and we Scots are shot in the foot by our own government. Allan Sutherland. 1 Willow Row, Stonehaven.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Prime Minister Theresa May speaks at the Conservati­ve party conference at the ICC in Birmingham.
Picture: PA. Prime Minister Theresa May speaks at the Conservati­ve party conference at the ICC in Birmingham.

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