NEARLY 95,000 North-East manufacturing jobs have been lost in the past 12 years because of Labour policies, the Tories claimed last night.

However, in an attack of their own, Labour warned that Conservative plans to scrap a job creation scheme would cost 3,000 jobs in the region.

Figures published yesterday by the Conservatives show that 1.7 million UK manufacturing jobs have been lost since 1997 – including 94,857 in the North-East.

The data was released as the Conservatives published a report by entrepreneur Sir James Dyson, which gave advice to the Tories about making Britain Europe’s leading high-tech exporter.

Shadow Business Secretary Ken Clarke said: “Labour has devastated manufacturing.

Gordon Brown once promised to revitalise the industry, but the figures show he failed.

“At least 95,000 jobs have gone and the sector has declined by a record level. This has been a tragedy for the North-East, an area with a proud manufacturing tradition.

“We will cut corporation tax rates, simplify the tax system and support high-tech innovation.

“British manufacturing cannot afford five more years of Gordon Brown making things worse.”

In response, Labour criticised Tory plans to scrap the Future Jobs Fund, which the Government claims has generated 3,000 jobs in the region.

Helen Goodman, Labour’s Work and Pension Minister and MP for Bishop Auckland, said: “David Cameron’s plans to scrap the fund are misguided and will deny opportunities to thousands of young people in this area.

“This just goes to prove again that the Conservatives are a change the North-East can’t afford.”

The Dyson Review: Ingenious Britain contains proposals on how best to create well-paid jobs. Its recommendations include a commitment to high-speed rail and nuclear power to demonstrate a Conservative Government’s ambitions for the country and encouraging more young people to choose science and engineering.

MP Roberta Blackman- Woods, Labour’s Deputy Regional Minister for the North- East, said: “The Conservatives’ plans to put up tax on business investments have already been labeled a disaster by manufacturers and, what’s more, their plans for One North East would hit the region’s economy hard.

“Ken Clarke should take a harder look at what his party’s plans would mean for manufacturers in the North-East.”