DAVID Cameron will today (tue) tell Scots that only the Tories can save the economy as he campaigns north of the Border for the first time in the General Election.

 

The Prime Minister, who flew into Edinburgh last night, will say that the British people have one month to avert the "disaster of an Ed Miliband Government" which would lead to a mountain of debt, punitive taxes and the introduction of Labour's "anti-business and anti-aspiration agenda".

He is expected to say: "These past five years we have got Britain back on its feet. All four nations are growing; jobs are being created the country over; taxes are coming down; the deficit has been halved as a share of our economy; and more families can look forward to a brighter future. We are fixing the economy so that everyone feels the benefit. Of course more remains to be done, but real progress has been made. In just one month's time, that progress is at risk."

It comes after the Conservative leader claimed the Tories were the "party of low taxes" and said reforms would leave almost 23 million households better off, a claim strongly disputed by Labour who accused the Prime Minister of planning a secret tax cut for millionaires.

The visit, as part of a one-day tour that will also see Mr Cameron campaign in Northern Ireland, Wales and Cornwall, comes as a new YouGov poll shows SNP support holding firm in Scotland.

The updated What Scotland Thinks/ScotCen Poll of Polls predicts support of 45 per cent for the SNP, compared to 28 per cent for Labour, 15 per cent for the Tories and four per cent for the Liberal Democrats. If repeated on May 7, it would be likely to leave Labour with just 10 MPs, compared to 47 for the SNP. The Liberal Democrats would be left with just one Scottish MP, down from 11 in 2010, while the Tories would retain their one seat.

However, Jim Murphy, speaking as he officially launched Scottish Labour's campaign, said polls were "there to be confounded".

Mr Murphy, along with Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson and Willie Rennie for the Liberal Democrats, is hoping to turn the tide against SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon at the first Scottish leaders televised debate, which takes place tonight.