The Scotsman

MSPS blast ‘insulting’ offer to see Brexit analysis as May courts Japanese business ANGERED

● Holyrood given 12-hour window to view impact study

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS paris.gourtsoyan­nis@scotsman.com

MSPS have accused the UK government of treating the Scottish Parliament with “contempt” over arrangemen­ts to view Brexit analysis.

Leaks from the Department for Exiting the EU (DEXEU) papers indicate Scottish economic growth would be cut under all three scenarios modelled.

Now, MSPS have criticised arrangemen­ts for them to view the papers after Brexit minister Robin Walker wrote to Holyrood’s Presiding Officer to confirm a confidenti­al reading room would be set up at the Scotland Office in Edinburgh.

MSPS will only be able to read the documents from 10am-1pm and 2pm-5pm on Thursday and Friday. Joan Mcalpine, convener of Holyrood’s Europe committee, tweeted that she was “incredulou­s and angry” that viewings were only available when the Scottish Parliament was sitting, or when MSPS are usually in their constituen­cies.

In addition, MSPS yesterday could only view every other page of the analysis because of an administra­tive error.

Ms Mcalpine said the move continues the “total contempt for the Scottish Parliament by DEXEU and Brexit Secretary David Davis”. Fellow committee member Ross Greer said the arrangemen­ts were “beyond insulting”. Labour’s Brexit spokesman Neil Findlay said the arrangemen­ts were “an absolute nonsense”.

Leaks from the documents indicate leaving the EU without a trade deal would cut Scottish economic growth by 9 per cent.

At a meeting in Downing Street, Theresa May told Japanese business executives that Brexit is “no small undertakin­g” but will allow a free trade deal with Japan.

The heads of businesses including household names such as Mitsubishi, Honda, Nissan and Panasonic – which employ thousands of workers across the country – met at Number 10 amid concern over estimates of the impact of Brexit on economic growth.

Speaking after the hourand-a-half meeting, Japan’s ambassador to the UK, Koji Tsuruoka, said manufactur­ing firms in particular “expected” free access to the European market to continue.

But Mr Tsuruoka warned: “If there is no profitabil­ity of continuing operations in the UK – not Japanese only – then no private company can continue operations. It is as simple as that. This is all high stakes that all of us need to keep in mind.”

Brexit Secretary David Davis criticised the EU for publishing plans that would allow it to sanction the UK during a transition period.

As a week of negotiatio­ns on the transition come to a close in Brussels, Mr Davis said he regarded the documents as “political”, published in bad faith, and “unwise”.

Position papers show the EU wants to have the power to rapidly curtail the UK’S single market benefits and force adherence to European rules if the transition agreement is breached.

In Dublin, the Irish govern- ment said it would not accept any “backslidin­g” on the deal struck over the Northern Irish border, and called on Mrs May to abandon her red lines on the customs union and single market. Foreign minister Simon Coveney said it was difficult to see how the UK will avoid the fall-back position of “full alignment” with EU regulation­s to keep the border open.

Mr Coveney said there was no uncertaint­y over what had been agreed on the border.

‘[Move shows] total contempt for the Scottish Parliament by DEXEU and Brexit Secretary David Davis’

JOAN MCALPINE

Holyrood’s Europe committee chair

 ??  ?? 0 Kazuo Okamoto, chief executive of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Europe, attempts to stroke Larry the Downing Street cat ahead of a meeting with Theresa May
0 Kazuo Okamoto, chief executive of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Europe, attempts to stroke Larry the Downing Street cat ahead of a meeting with Theresa May

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