Continue reading Holyrood urges MPs to dismiss UK Brexit options
Tag: Westminster
Brock calls for scrapping of ‘settled status’ scheme for EU citizens
Deidre Brock MP has called for the UK Government to scrap plans for EU citizens living in the UK to have to apply to the ‘Settled Status’ scheme and pay a fee in order to have the right to remain here. Continue reading Brock calls for scrapping of ‘settled status’ scheme for EU citizens
Scottish Government commits £125 million to combat UK austerity
Scottish Ministers are on course to invest over £125 million in 2018-19 to mitigate against the worst impact of UK Government welfare reforms and to protect those on low incomes. Continue reading Scottish Government commits £125 million to combat UK austerity
UK Government to reform workplace rights
The Westminster government will today set out the biggest package of workplace reforms for over twenty years, with ambitious reforms to ensure the UK leads the world in meeting the challenges of the changing world of work. However the TUC says platform companies are being let off the hook. Continue reading UK Government to reform workplace rights
Edinburgh faces social care financial crisis
Edinburgh Integrated Joint Board have reported an overspend of 4.7m for the period to the end of July 2018, and that this is projected to rise to £11.9m by the end of the financial year. Scottish Conservatives are urging the Scottish Government to step in ease the pressure on Edinburgh’s IJB. Continue reading Edinburgh faces social care financial crisis
Scottish Parliament rejects Brexit deal
May tells Sturgeon: “Listen to the voices”
Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has urged Prime Minister Theresa May to change course to avoid an “utterly disastrous” no-deal Brexit if the Prime Minister’s plans are rejected by MPs in a crunch vote on 11 December – but Theresa May says the First Minister should listen to Scotland’s business leaders. Continue reading May tells Sturgeon: “Listen to the voices”
Brexit: May looks for public pressure to convince sceptical MPs
Downing Street has given forty reasons to back the Brexit deal:
- Free movement will come to an end, once and for all, with the introduction of a new skills-based immigration system.
- We will take back full control of our money which we will be able to spend on our priorities such as the NHS. We will leave EU regional funding programmes – with the UK deciding how we spend this money in the future.
- The jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in the UK will end.
- In the future we will make our own laws in our own Parliaments and Assemblies in Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast.
- We will leave the Common Agricultural Policy.
- We will leave the Common Fisheries Policy and become an independent coastal state again, with control over our waters.
- We will be able to strike trade deals with other countries around the world. Deals can be negotiated and ratified during the implementation period and put in place straight afterwards.
- We will be an independent voice for free trade on the global stage, speaking for ourselves at the World Trade Organisation, for the first time in decades.
- We will be freed from the EU’s political commitment to ever closer union.
- We will be out of the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights, recognising the UK’s long track record in protecting human rights.
- A fair settlement of our financial obligations, which will be less than half what was originally predicted.
- Both the one million UK citizens living in the EU and the three million EU citizens living in the UK will have their rights legally guaranteed so they can carry on living their lives as before.
- We will have a free trade area with the EU, with no tariffs, fees, charges or quantitative restrictions across all sectors, helping to protect UK jobs. We will be the only major economy with such a relationship with the EU.
- We’ve agreed with the EU that we will be as ambitious as possible in easing the movement of goods between the UK and the EU as part of our free trade area.
- We will have an implementation period after we leave the EU during which trade will continue much as it does now. This will allow government, businesses and citizens time to prepare for our new relationship.
- The deal will see a greater reduction in barriers to trade in services than in any previous trade deal.
- There will be an agreement that means UK citizens can practice their profession in the EU.
- A comprehensive deal that secures access to the EU market for our financial services sector meaning the EU cannot withdraw it on a whim. This will provide stability and certainty for the industry.
- A best in class agreement on digital, helping to facilitate e-commerce and reduce unjustified barriers to trade by electronic means.
- We have agreed that there will be arrangements that will let data continue to flow freely, vital across our economy and for our shared security.
- Trade arrangements for gas and electricity will help to ease pressure on prices and keep supply secure.
- Strong rules will be in place to keep trade fair, so neither the UK nor EU can unfairly subsidise their industries against the other.
- We will have a comprehensive Air Transport Agreement and comparable access for freight operators, buses and coaches.
- We have agreed that there will be arrangements so we can take part in EU programmes like Horizon and Erasmus.
- There will be a co-operation agreement with Euratom, covering all the key areas where we want to collaborate.
- Visa-free travel to the EU for holidays and business trips will continue.
- Our new security partnership will mean sharing of data like DNA, passenger records and fingerprints to fight crime and terrorism, going beyond any previous agreement the EU has made with a third country.
- Our new security partnership will enable the efficient and swift surrender of suspected and wanted criminals.
- Close co-operation for our police forces and other law enforcement bodies.
- We will continue to work together on sanctions against those who violate international rules.
- We will work together on cyber-security threats and support international efforts to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorism.
- Disputes between the UK and the EU on the agreement will be settled by an independent arbitrator, ensuring a fair outcome.
- We will meet our commitment to ensure that there is no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.
- We will keep the Common Travel Area between the United Kingdom and Ireland, ensuring everyday life continues as now.
- We will keep the Single Electricity Market between Northern Ireland and Ireland, which will help maintain a stable energy supply and keep prices down in Northern Ireland.
- Both sides will be legally committed, by the Withdrawal Agreement, to use “best endeavours” to get the future relationship in place by the end of the implementation period, helping to ensure the backstop is never used.
- An agreement to consider alternative arrangements to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland, including all facilitative arrangements and technologies, and to begin preparatory work on this before we leave the EU, reflecting shared determination to replace the backstop.
- In the unlikely event we do have to use the backstop, a UK-wide customs area will ensure there is no customs border in the Irish Sea.
- Gibraltar’s British sovereignty will be protected.
- The deal delivers on the referendum result. It takes back control of our money, borders and laws whilst protecting jobs, security and the integrity of the United Kingdom.
Mrs May faces a Herculean task in trying to get her deal through parliament, however. Tory dissenters, Labour, SNP, the Lib Dems and even her allies the DUP are united in their opposition to the Brexit deal.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: “This is a bad deal for the country.
“It is the result of a miserable failure of negotiation that leaves us with the worst of all worlds. It gives us less say over our future, and puts jobs and living standards at risk.
“That is why Labour will oppose this deal in parliament. We will work with others to block a no deal outcome, and ensure that Labour’s alternative plan for a sensible deal to bring the country together is on the table.
“That includes a permanent customs union with a UK say, a strong single market deal and guarantees on workers’ rights, consumer and environmental protections.”
The Commons vote is likely to take place on 12 December. And after that? Who knows?
Brexit deal ‘essentially dead’ as May clings on
The UK Government’s proposed Brexit deal is ‘essentially dead’ because of ‘self-imposed draconian red lines,’ Constitutional Relations Secretary Michael Russell has said in a statement to the Scottish Parliament yesterday. Continue reading Brexit deal ‘essentially dead’ as May clings on