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    1. Jaded_Strain_3753 on

      Huh, this is probably the rare principled resignation. Good for him if so

    2. TheBadLocksmith on

      This whole thing has been such a disaster.

      The delays to the review, not even taking into account the expected miniscule funding, are seriously hurting the joint fighter programme with Japan and Italy, and making us look like unreliable partners. And that programme was actually going really well… especially considering the collapse of the France-Germany programme a few days ago.

      They’re really playing with fire here. Healey right to resign.

    3. ThatZephyrGuy on

      Bravo. This government has continued the trend of selling out the armed forces in order to make a quick buck.

      Regardless of the state the armed forces has been left in by previous governments, tomorrow’s shortfalls must be fixed today, and so far labour has been incredibly poor at this. Projects like Type 83 need securing and getting running now, lest we face the type 23 situation all over again when type 45 begins to age in 20 years time.

      So far Britain has:

      -No replacement for Hawk, which is rapidly appreciating the end of its service life

      -No replacement for Type 45

      -Delayed replacement for an aging CASD fleet

      -An impotent replacement for Warrior (Ajax) which is still suffering from teething problems.

      -No real replacement for Eurofighter, with the suggested joint national replacement now in jeopardy due to the UKs lack of commitment.

      This government has kicked the can down the road for the SDR enough, and the armed forces has been failed at EVERY turn by successive governments.

    4. Is this the end of Kier? He was on a knife-edge already and this is pretty damning.

    5. Few-Conversations on

      God I hate this government so much. So busy wasting time on our porn consumption and completely neglecting their job actually keeping us safe. 

      Good on Healey for having some integrity.

    6. Legendofvader on

      Reading that „John Healey has resigned as defence secretary in a letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Here are some of the key lines – we’ll have more soon:

      *“This new era for defence required further investment through the Defence Investment Plan. The excellent and extensive cross-government work that completed in January-overseen by you, me and the Chancellor – confirmed the scale of the challenge and the rising demands on defence.*

      *“Since then, you have been unable, and the Treasury has been unwilling, to commit the resources that the nation needs to defend the country at this time of rising threats.*

      *“As I’ve outlined to you, there are credible ways of meeting the mid-term funding challenges, working multi-nationally and as other European nations are doing, to allow us to protect our ability to deliver the missions of our Labour Government.*

      *“You know what defence needs. You made the argument for this powerfully in your speech at the Munich Security Conference back in February. Without a DIP (Defence Investment Plan) that meets the moment in this way, I am being forced to make decisions that would reduce the readiness of our Forces and increase the risk to personnel on operations, and could make the country less safe.““*

      Respect for him and for Starmer contempt. I generally believe as PM he has done a good job under difficult circumstances. The fact he and Reeves cant see the urgency of this and would rather spend billions on theme parks and benefits is baffling.

      If i am given a choice between Farage/Tories and Labour. I will vote Labour but make no mistake this in my eyes damages their credibility as effective leaders.

    7. Important_Ruin on

      Armed forces/defense wouldn’t be in this position if prior governments hadnt cut spending over their previous 14 years.

      Now need to make up of 14 years of cuts while me everyone else also needs huge investment after 14 years of being ignored and no fiscal wiggle room to do so.

      **UK Defence Spending & Armed Forces Personnel Trends (2010–2026)**

      | Year | Budget (£Bn) | Change % | % GDP | Year | Combined Personnel | Army | Navy | Air Force | Combined Change % | Army Change % | Navy Change % | Air Force Change % |
      |———|————–|———-|——-|——|———————|——-|——-|———–|——————-|—————|—————|———————|
      | 2010/11 | 39.3 | — | 2.40% | 2012 | 221.33 | 138.99| 40.35 | 41.99 | — | — | — | — |
      | 2011/12 | 38.7 | -1.53% | 2.30% | 2013 | 211.34 | 133.49| 38.74 | 39.11 | -4.73% | -4.12% | -4.16% | -7.36% |
      | 2012/13 | 36.3 | -6.20% | 2.10% | 2014 | 198.82 | 122.84| 38.32 | 37.66 | -6.30% | -8.67% | -1.10% | -3.85% |
      | 2013/14 | 36.4 | 0.28% | 2.00% | 2015 | 195.68 | 120.49| 38.20 | 36.99 | -1.60% | -1.95% | -0.31% | -1.81% |
      | 2014/15 | 36.7 | 0.82% | 2.00% | 2016 | 197.09 | 121.75| 38.36 | 36.98 | 0.72% | 1.03% | 0.42% | -0.03% |
      | 2015/16 | 36.6 | -0.27% | 1.90% | 2017 | 197.04 | 121.54| 38.45 | 37.05 | -0.03% | -0.17% | 0.23% | 0.19% |
      | 2016/17 | 37.1 | 1.37% | 1.80% | 2018 | 194.11 | 118.58| 38.45 | 37.08 | -1.51% | -2.50% | 0.00% | 0.08% |
      | 2017/18 | 38.7 | 4.31% | 1.80% | 2019 | 192.17 | 116.23| 38.79 | 37.15 | -1.01% | -2.02% | 0.88% | 0.19% |
      | 2018/19 | 40.2 | 3.88% | 1.80% | 2020 | 193.98 | 117.56| 39.05 | 37.37 | 0.93% | 1.13% | 0.67% | 0.59% |
      | 2019/20 | 44.2 | 9.95% | 1.90% | 2021 | 198.87 | 120.66| 40.40 | 37.81 | 2.46% | 2.57% | 3.34% | 1.16% |
      | 2020/21 | 44.6 | 0.90% | 2.10% | 2022 | 196.25 | 118.24| 40.13 | 37.88 | -1.34% | -2.05% | -0.67% | 0.18% |
      | 2021/22 | 48.7 | 9.19% | 2.10% | 2023 | 188.82 | 113.44| 38.77 | 36.61 | -3.93% | -4.23% | -3.51% | -3.47% |
      | 2022/23 | 55.5 | 13.96% | 2.20% | 2024 | 183.22 | 110.30| 37.78 | 35.14 | -3.06% | -2.85% | -2.62% | -4.18% |
      | 2023/24 | 56.8 | 2.34% | 2.10% | 2025 | 181.91 | 109.17| 37.90 | 34.84 | -0.72% | -1.04% | 0.32% | -0.86% |
      | 2024/25 | 63.6 | 11.97% | 2.20% | 2026 | — | — | — | — | -20.11% | -24.86% | -6.52% | -19.17% |

      **Sources (Statista):**
      – UK Defence Spending (£bn): https://www.statista.com/statistics/298490/defense-spending-united-kingdom-uk/
      – Defence Spending (% GDP): https://www.statista.com/statistics/298527/defense-spending-as-share-of-gdp-united-kingdom-uk/
      – Armed Forces Personnel by Branch: https://www.statista.com/statistics/579991/number-of-uk-armed-forces-by-military-branch/

    8. No_Concept4683 on

      Good on him to resign, we need to prioritize spending on defence. Unfortunately I doubt any of the parties will actually make good on this objective, as it’s hard to see where the money is going to come from. Tax is already very high and there is no appetite to cut spending meaningfully…

    9. This is very concerning. Defence should be the number 1 priority of a government. 

    10. GuybrushFunkwood on

      He probably saw a rough draft of the defence review suggesting we sell off our nuclear deterrent to Iran so we can spunk even more money away on keeping the backbenchers happy.

    11. Healey is a Starmer ally so that’s a blow. A fairly sensible, low-key politician so I doubt he’ll cause too much trouble in the media or back benches but his resignation alone is pretty damaging

    12. AverycoldGoose on

      More evidence that the government really doesn’t have any money.

      I hope burnham is asked how he’s going to fund his spending commitments when we can’t fund defence

    13. How can the government look around at the world as it stands and reason that we don’t need higher defence spending.

      The only way I can rationalise this is that they perceive the money as being spent in the wrong places, or in such a way that won’t drive growth in the wider economy.

      Either way, Healey was one of the few saving graces of an otherwise disastrously third-rate government and it’s a shame to see him go.

    14. Efficient_Chance7639 on

      Good for him standing up for the armed forces, the country and his principles.

      Hoping he stands, and wins, the leadership contest now.

    15. TurbulentBullfrog829 on

      The stance on the defence spending plans is truly baffling. It’s one of the biggest missteps of the government and it doesn’t seem to have any rationale behind it unless it’s the risk of breaching the fiscal rules. But it just takes a little imagination to get around that so it’s just baffling. 

    16. Organic-Feedback1686 on

      How the hell is the UK suppose to build up it defense, if the armed forces don’t get the resources it needs?

    17. I have a degree for sympathy for Kier Starmer; there are just so many problems that he inherited from the previous government and every decision comes with an opportunity cost. What he hasn’t done, however, is shown any vision or dynamism in fixing any of Britain’s problems. Like it or loathe it there are going to have to be fundamental generational changes in the years ahead.

    18. user97532567 on

      We need to increase the defence budget and reduce the deficit. This means we need to cut government spending across the board.

    19. Front_Mention on

      Rock a and hard place,, increasing defense spending is needed due to 14 year of cuts. But due to austerity there is nowhere to easily get the money without pissing off lots of people

    20. His letter really does read like a lot of patience has just finally run out. Good for him. Ultimately Starmer should order Reeves to find the money, and it is her that can choose whether to resign. As it stands, we are now a laughing stock. I’m not even sure if it’s as good as that.

    21. Intergalatic_Baker on

      0.08% Increase in Defence Spending, what pushed him over the edge to Resign.

      Starmer wants to backload it to the 2029 region, but we’re out of fucking time now.

    22. Cannot believe that Kier can still not get his government in order after repeated feedback and resignations.

      Guy doesn’t inspire at all and seems like a managerial PM than a leader. I find him quite similar to Rishi who could manage but could not inspire or lead.

    23. potato_face1234 on

      Successive governments have decimated our armed forces, it’s in a sad state now.

    24. przhauukwnbh on

      Respect that a lot from Healey. Theres too much momentum against Starmer for the position to remain tenable if Burnham wins Makerfield.

      No clue how labour stem this bleeding though. It’s so blatantly obvious we have a spend problem yet that is the antithesis of what the party is built on.

    25. RandomSculler on

      You have to laugh at cleverly and Jenricks comments like they’re pretending that UK Defence isn’t in this state because of their incompetence for 14 years? 😂

      Clearly the gov is struggling with funding for defence but it’s because of just how badly the tories ran things, accepting there just isn’t a magic money tree to paper over the issues is a good direction for the gov to go in

    26. Good on him. I met him briefly during the 2024 election campaign and he seemed genuinely sincere. Glad to see that hasn’t changed.

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