Airbus should be given a similar "deal" to that which the Government offered Nissan after the Brexit vote in an effort to protect the estimated 100,000 jobs the aircraft manufacturer brings to Wales, Labour has said.

Around 1000 workers at the site at Broughton near Chester help to build the wings for the Airbus aircraft.

Last month, Nissan said it was extending production of two new vehicles in Sunderland amid rising speculation that it could ditch the UK following the country's decision to quit the European Union.

The move secured 7,000 jobs in the Brexit-backing city, but prompted a volley of questions over whether a so-called "sweetheart deal" between the carmaker and the Government had been struck.

Ministers have strongly denied any financial incentives were offered and Chancellor Philip Hammond has said any costs arising from the assurances would be small enough to be covered within the Department for Business's existing departmental expenditure limits (DELs).

Shadow Welsh secretary Jo Stevens said there are now millions of pounds of investment on the line in Wales as well as England.

Ahead of a Westminster Hall debate on the impact of Brexit on Wales, Ms Stevens said: "So far this has been a Government of smoke and mirrors when it comes to Brexit; whether through ignorance or incompetence they will not give a straight answer to the simplest of questions.

"If Wales is going to get a worse deal than Northern Ireland and Scotland, ministers need to tell us why.

"If not, as one of the biggest employers and investors in Wales - will Airbus get the same type of deal from the Government as Nissan did?

"There are millions of pounds and thousands of jobs on the line so we need answers not bluster or delaying tactics from the minister.

"Will he offer that deal and protect the future of hundreds of thousands of jobs in Wales or not?"

Airbus has its headquarters in Toulouse, France, and has major UK operations at Filton, near Bristol, and Broughton in north Wales.