Trust in Westminster has been "eroded" by the Brexit negotiations, according to Nicola Sturgeon.

The First Minister said clashes over Brexit laws have strained relations between Holyrood and London.

The Scottish Parliament has already said it will not give consent to any further Brexit legislation until the "broken" devolution system is fixed.

Ms Sturgeon wants protections written into law that would effectively give the Scottish Government a veto of some of the laws pulling the UK out of the bloc.

Speaking after a meeting of the British-Irish Council in Guernsey, she said: "Our experience in recent weeks and months around the Withdrawal Bill discussions have put a strain on that trust and I think inevitably have eroded it.

"I am certainly very keen to see how we can rebuild it and re-establish it."

But Ms Sturgeon said "respect and consent" must be the basis of working relations.

Tory MP David Lidington said there had been a "real disagreement" over the Brexit process.

He said: "I'm not going to hide at all from the fact the UK and Scottish governments have had a serious disagreement over the EU (Withdrawal Bill)."

But he said he believed the Sewel Convention, which means Westminster does not normally legislate on devolved matters without Holyrood's approval, had been "upheld in full".