12:59

At first minister’s Questions in the Scottish parliament, the debate immediately turns to Brexit. The proposed deal will place Scotland at a real competitive disadvantage to Northern Ireland, says Nicola Sturgeon. “This is not an academic or abstract argument but has real consequences for jobs and living standards in Scotland”.

Sturgeon goes on the highlight the letter that Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson (now on maternity leave) and Scottish secretary David Mundell wrote to May a few weeks ago, warning that “any deal that threatens the integrity of the UK’s internal market” was a resignation issue for them. Where is David Mundell now, she asks. Does he have the principle to resign? Both Dominic Raab and Esther McVey have warned that that the deal is a real threat to the integrity of the UK, she says.

The Tory government is imploding as we speak, people the length and breadth of the UK are seriously worried about their jobs and their living standards on the line because of the ideology of this Tory government and the complete shambles they have made of the negotiations.

The first minister reserves some of her ire for Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard. He asks if she backs a general election. She replies:

I think it’s reasonable to say that the SNP made it clear that SNP MPs would vote against this deal. I hope that no party in the Commons falls for the prime minister’s spin that it is a bad deal or no deal. But if [the deal is voted down] what exactly would Labour do on Brexit that is different to what Theresa May is doing, because I do not have a clue!

Sturgeon says that Brexit makes the case for independence grow stronger every day although – as usual - she won’t be drawn on timing of another referendum. “That time will come and when it does I have no doubt that the people of Scotland will choose to be independent.”