which does mean that that happens all the time that it is looked at. so if a new law is passed that does impact the rest of the united kingdom, it is important that the uk government receives advice on that before deciding what to do, if anything, and that is a long established and completely standard process. what is it you re worried about? as i said, we re waiting to see the advice and it may well be that the law impacts on other aspects of the united kingdom across the united kingdom. that s why we have an established process in place. it s entirely reasonable, it s entirely standard. it s been there for years, if not decades, and we re just following that process. wouldn t that cause enormous strain in relations between the uk and scottish governments if you did step in to block it? i thinkjumping ahead of ourselves i d say we re just being entirely reasonable in following the established practice, in receiving advice on the potential impact of a scottish law on the entire united
Freeport focused on green energy could create over 16,000 new jobs and £5 5 billion new investment, claims backers
business-live.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from business-live.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
When thousands of crabs started washing up on the beaches of Teesside in north-east England, authorities blamed algae in the water. But the fishers watching their livelihoods disappear weren’t buying it. Joshua Kelly reports