4. (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane)
(SNP):
To ask the First Minister what the
Scottish Government’s response is to the United Kingdom
Government’s stronger towns fund. (S5F-03121)
The First Minister (Nicola Sturgeon):
To be honest, it is hard to know what our response should
be, because the UK Government has been unable to confirm any
details of the funding implications of the announcement for
Scotland. We will continue to press the UK Government to ensure
that Scotland receives its fair share of any additional
funding. As with so many things related to Brexit, the UK
Government’s plans are, frankly, as clear as mud, but they
suggest that Scotland is continually being short
changed.
:
I acknowledge the First Minister’s point that much of the
process is unclear. Does she share my concerns about the
exclusion of Scotland and Wales from the Prime Minister’s
Brexit bung? Does she agree that it is yet another example of
the failing fiasco of Tory Brexit, which one of the Prime
Minister’s Tory cabinet ministers said was like hitting an
iceberg, and that it is surpassed only by the complete
inadequacy of the 13 Tory MPs from Scotland, each of whom
represents a constituency that voted to remain in the European
Union, and their failure to stand up for Scotland?
The First Minister:
Those points are important. Not only do we have no
clarity on the stronger towns fund or whether Scotland will get
any share of it, let alone a fair share, we still have no
clarity regarding the future of structural funds or the
so-called shared prosperity fund. We have also heard
that the UK Government is to provide an additional £140 million
to Northern Ireland, but there is no indication of equivalent
consequential funding for Scotland or Wales. We welcome the
additional funding for Northern Ireland, but there must be
confirmation that Scotland and Wales will be treated
fairly.
In sharp contrast to the Prime Minister’s Brexit bung,
this morning, the Scottish Government has announced the
projects that will benefit from our £20 million regeneration
capital grant fund. That is not money to persuade anybody to
vote for anybody; it is just money to ensure the regeneration
of communities the length and breadth of Scotland. That shows a
Government that is getting on with the day job, and the UK
Government could learn lots of lessons from us.