The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Most Scots want a UK-wide Brexit deal, says new survey

Top pollster finds 62% of voters against Scotland-only measures

- BY KIERAN ANDREWS

Almost two-thirds of Scots want a UK- wide Brexit deal, according to new research published as Britain started the formal process of leaving the EU.

A report by Professor John Curtice, the country’s leading pollster, found that the prospect of Scotland having different rules on immigratio­n and free trade from the rest of theUKwas opposed by 62% of voters north of the border.

Its results will be seen as a boost to Conservati­ve Brexit Secretary David Davis, who wrote to his SNP counterpar­t Mike Russell yesterday, saying the options set out by Scottish ministers to stay in the single market would not work while the rest of the country left the free trade area.

A UK Government source said: “There was no evidence that a separate deals along the lines the Scottish Government was proposing was deliverabl­e, workable or required.

“One of the underlying principles is we don’t want to do anything that would damage the smooth workings of the UK’s domestic market. In terms of doing trade deals with the rest of the world, you need an integrated UK market, with the same regulatory frameworks.”

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon attacked Tory ministers for formally dismissing “our compromise proposals to keep Scotland in the single market at the same time as the Article 50 letter was sent”.

Mr Russell claimed the prime minister was presiding over “constituti­onal chaos” in the UK.

He described the moment as “sad and self-destructiv­e” and the beginning of a “backwards journey” towards greater centralisa­tion of power at Westminste­r.

MrRussell added:“We’re here because the prime minister particular­ly will not compromise, will not debate and discuss the reality of the constituti­onal situation of these islands.”

Professor Curtice’s research for ScotCen found that Scottish voters’ views are similar to both the stance taken by the UK Government and to those of people across Britain as a whole, but are at odds with the Scottish Government’s support for freedom of movement.

He said: “If this picture is correct, it is far from clear that concerns about Brexit are likely to change the minds of many voters about the merits or otherwise of independen­ce – so long, of course, as the UK government succeeds in delivering free trade and immigratio­n control.”

He added that voters in Scotland and across the rest of the UK “want much the same outcome – free trade, immigratio­n control and retention of much of the consumer and environmen­tal regulation currently afforded by the EU.”

AdamTomkin­s, the Scottish Conservati­ve constituti­on spokesman, said the report “dismissed themyth Scots think differentl­y from any otherparto­f theUnited Kingdom when it came to the Brexit negotiatio­ns.”

Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale said the triggering of Article 50 was a “deeply divisive moment in our country’s history”.

She added Scotland “deserves better” that the two “extreme constituti­onal positions” adopted by its Tory and SNP government­s. Andshe argued: “The letter signed by the prime minister will have a seismic impact on Scotland’s economy, risking thousands of jobs and livelihood­s.”

Ross Greer, the Scottish Greens MSP, described the decision to pursue Brexit as “economic and social vandalism, inflicted on Scotland by a Tory government we did not elect through a Brexit we voted against”.

Willie Rennie, the Scottish Liberal Democrats leader, said that by taking theUKout of the European Single Market, the Prime Minister had “chosen the hardest and most divisive form of Brexit”.

Meanwhile, Euroscepti­cs, including Ukip’s Scottish MEP, David Coburn, toasted the triggering ofArticle 50 with cake and cava in Brussels.

“Voters in Scotland and across rest of UK want much the same outcome”

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 ??  ?? John Curtice: report
John Curtice: report

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