THERESA May and Nicola Sturgeon are on a Brexit collision course after Tory MPs pushed the controversial EU Withdrawal Bill through the House of Commons.

Despite the concerns of the Scottish and Welsh parliaments, and despite the worries of many of her own MPs, the Prime Minister was able to get the legislation through its final stages in the House of Commons, with little changes made from last year. The Bill now progresses to the House of Lords.

The Withdrawal Bill will, effectively, take the UK out of the EU and transfer all European laws into British laws.

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One of the most controversial sections of the Bill is Clause 11. That sees powers in devolved areas currently controlled by Brussels going straight to London after Brexit, rather than heading to Edinburgh or Cardiff.

Sturgeon and Welsh First Minister, Carwyn Jones, described the clause as a “blatant power grab”.

In December, David Mundell promised MPs that the Bill would be amended. However, last week he admitted that was no longer happening immediately and that it would be up to the House of Lords to make the necessary changes.

If those changes aren’t made then neither the Scottish Parliament nor the Welsh Assembly will give the Withdrawal Bill their consent.

Though that doesn’t legally stop the UK Government from going ahead and taking the UK out of the EU, it will be unprecedented for Westminster to, in effect, ignore the decision of lawmakers in Edinburgh and Cardiff.

Brexit Secretary David Davis insisted yesterday that the Government was “committed to achieving legislative consent”.

The results worked out well for the Prime Minister. Jeremy Corbyn, however, faced a rebellion in the Commons, with around 50 of his MPs backing an SNP amendment to keep the UK in the single market and customs union.

Corbyn, whose position on the single market has been confused, had whipped his party against the motion. In the end it failed by 99 to 322.

Labour did back a last-minute SNP attempt to scrap the whole Bill, but it was defeated 295 to 322.

In his final speech of the debate, Ian Blackford, accused the Government of “ducking and diving any responsibility for the legal and constitutional make up of the UK by rail-roading a car crash plan through Parliament”.

“The Secretary of State for Scotland should be ashamed of himself,” he added. “First he promised that this would result in a power bonanza, and then he slapped us with Clause 11, the now infamous power element of this legislation.”

He said that it undermined the very principles on which the Scottish Parliament was established, describing it as the “latest insult this government has offered the people of Scotland”

The 13 Scottish Tory MPs could have stopped the Bill but instead helped push it through, choosing Theresa May over their constituencies.

Labour’s shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer said the Bill, despite hours and hours of debate, had “never been fit for purpose”

“It was not fit for purpose when it started its life last year, and after 64 hours at committee, and 10 hours at report it’s still not fit for purpose.”

But Davis still insisted that the Government had “listened carefully” and “worked collaboratively”.