The Scotsman

‘Presumptio­n of devolution’ as laws return from the EU

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

There will be a “presumptio­n of devolution” with significan­t new powers for Scotland, the UK government has indicated as it begins the process of transferri­ng EU law from Brussels ahead of Brexit.

Theresa May said the government would “consult extensivel­y” on which additional powers would be passed to devolved administra­tions as they return from the EU.

Her Brexit letter to the EU said “it is the expectatio­n of the government that the outcome of this process will be a significan­t increase in the decision-making power of each devolved administra­tion”.

Taking the first step today, the UK Government will publish a white paper on a Great Repeal Bill that will transfer thousands of EU rules into domestic statute. Westminste­r and devolved parliament­s will be given temporary powers to “correct” up to 1,000 regulation­s so that they function properly after Brexit.

A UK government source said there would be a “presumptio­n of devolution” as that process moves forward. It comes amid a growing row between Downing Street and devolved administra­tions over who will take control of EU responsibi­lities in devolved areas like agricultur­e and fisheries.

Nicola Sturgeon last night said the Prime Minister “should be judged not on her words but on her actions” on more devolution, and called the triggering of Arti- 0 Theresa May: Government will ‘consult extensivel­y’ cle 50 a “leap in the dark”.

“Scotland voted decisively to remain part of Europe, but the UK government only formally responded with a dismissal of our compromise proposals to keep Scotland in the Single Market at the same time as the Article 50 letter was sent,” Ms Sturgeon said.

Responding to the Prime Minister’s announceme­nt in the House of Commons, SNP Westminste­r leader Angus Robertson accused the Prime Minister of having “broken her word” by triggering Article 50 without reaching an agreement with devolved administra­tions on Brexit.

“On this issue, it is not a United Kingdom, and the Prime Minster needs to respect – respect – the difference­s across the nations of the United Kingdom. If she does not… she will make Scottish independen­ce inevitable.”

Ahead of the Great Repeal Bill white paper, Brexit Secretary David Davis said: “At the heart of the referendum decision was sovereignt­y. A strong, independen­t country needs control of its own laws. That process starts now.

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