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Prime Minister championing Brexit deal in Scotland as Nicola Sturgeon warns of £1,600 annual cost to each Scot

Theresa May
Theresa May

Theresa May heads to Scotland tomorrow to try and sell her Brexit deal to the public ahead of next month’s crunch vote.

On the eve of the Glasgow visit, Nicola Sturgeon branded the Prime Minister’s plan a “bad deal” that could cost each Scot £1,610 a year.

The SNP chief said the Tory leader is “governing by threat” in her bid to impose her Brexit package on Remain-voting Scotland.

Mrs May said the agreement she has struck will protect jobs and herald a new era for Scottish exporters.

“It includes a new free trade area with no tariffs, fees, quantitative restrictions or rules of origin checks — an unprecedented economic relationship that no other major economy has,” the PM said ahead of touring a Glasgow factory.

“At the same time, we will be free to strike our own trade deals around the world – providing even greater opportunity to Scottish exporters.”

She added: “Crucially, the deal also ensures that we will leave EU programmes that do not work in our interests.

“So we will be out of the common agricultural policy, which has failed our farmers, and out of the common fisheries policy, which has so tragically failed Scotland’s coastal communities.”

Mrs May is on a two-week campaign to convince MPs and voters to support the withdrawal agreement and political declaration on future trade relations she secured with the EU last week.

It would end EU-UK freedom of movement and keep Britain in a temporary customs union with its European neighbours after the end of the transition period.

That would allow tariff-free trade with the bloc, but is likely to restrict the UK’s ability to strike new deals with third countries such as the US.

On Tuesday, the Scottish Government launched a new paper on the damage that Mrs May’s deal would do on Scotland.

Officials said the deal could result in the “loss equivalent to £1,610 per person in Scotland compared to EU membership by 2030”.

Investment in Scotland could be 7.7% lower by that date compared to if the UK stayed in the European Union, the report added.

Meanwhile, the “special deal” being put in place to prevent the return to a hard border in Ireland could leave Scotland at a “serious competitive disadvantage” to Northern Ireland.

“In short, it will make us poorer,” Ms Sturgeon told a press conference in Bute House.

Speaking about the Conservative leader, Ms Sturgeon said: “The prime minister has made it clear at every turn that she is not interested in compromise.

“In fact she seems to have given up any attempt at governing by consensus and is now governing by threat.”

MPs will vote on the draft Withdrawal Agreement on December 11.

Before that Holyrood could get the chance to have its say on the proposals, with plans for a symbolic ballot to be held next week – when a majority of MSPs will most likely vote against it.