In a dramatic move, Defence Minister Al Carns has stepped down, criticizing Labour for what he describes as a neglect of Britain’s military. He declared that he couldn’t, in good conscience, support the current Defence Investment Plan.
Following in the footsteps of Defence Secretary John Healey, the Armed Forces Minister expressed his disapproval, citing the overdue plan as unsuitable for addressing current threats.
Shortly after the resignation of the highly decorated former marine, Downing Street announced that Dan Jarvis would step in as the new Defence Secretary, taking over from Healey.
Amidst the unfolding crisis, Sir Keir Starmer assured the public in his first statement since Thursday that the government remains committed to equipping the armed forces with the necessary tools to safeguard Britain and ensure national security.
In his resignation letter to the Prime Minister, Carns wrote, “We owe it to those serving the UK to provide the necessary equipment and demonstrate loyalty once their duty is fulfilled. Currently, we are falling short on both counts.”
He further expressed his inability to support a level of investment that he believes falls short of meeting the requirements, stating he couldn’t justify such inadequacy in Parliament.
‘We are asking our armed forces to operate in a more dangerous world on a budget written for a calmer one,’ he said.
‘A serious country funds its defence to meet the threat it actually faces, not the threat it wished it faced.’
Al Carns (pictured) resigned on Thursday evening after criticising the Government’s defence investment plan
The former regular Royal Marines Officer and a current reserve officer said the Prime Minister’s spending ‘isn’t enough’ and that he ‘wasn’t happy with the level of transformation in it’
Carns’ resignation follows that of his boss, John Healey (pictured, right, with the Prime Minister last October). Healey accused Sir Keir of failing to ‘defend the country’
Mr Carns, 46, who served as an adviser to three UK defence secretaries, added: ‘The character of conflict is changing faster than our procurement can keep up with.
‘We are still purchasing capability suitable for the last war while our adversaries arm for the next one.’
He concluded: ‘We need a new way of governing and we need it now.’
He also criticised the Northern Ireland legacy bill as well as department in-fighting.
He previously announced his own leadership ambitions and said he would stand in a contest to replace Sir Keir Starmer.
More widely, Al Carns criticised the Labour Government’s overall workings, writing: ‘The machinery of government itself has been left to decay. Decisions that should take days take months.
‘Departments fight each other instead of the problem. Officials and ministers who know the truth are not always rewarded for telling it.’
He concluded: ‘I’ll keep fighting for the people I served with. I hope this government will too.’
Mr Carns’ resignation follows that of John Healey, Britain’s defence secretary, earlier today, after he also accused the Prime Minister of failing to ‘defend the country’.
Keir Starmer is desperately trying to finalise the Defence Investment Plan, which has been the subject of months of bitter wrangling
Al Carns wrote a letter to the Prime Minister criticising his Defence Investment Plan, calling it ‘inadequate’
The defence secretary announced he was resigning with a brutal parting shot at the PM and Chancellor Rachel Reeves after months of bitter wrangling over military funding.
Mr Healey said he could not accept the settlement in the Defence Investment Plan because it fell ‘well short of what is required’ at a ‘dangerous time’.
He suggested the proposals would only boost military spending from 2.6 per cent of GDP next year to just 2.68 per cent in 2030, despite the ‘imperative to speed up readiness to fight’. That is equivalent to around £10billion extra, about a third of what had been pleaded for.
Swiping at Sir Keir and the Chancellor, Mr Healey said: ‘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.’
Late on Thursday night, Number 10 announced Dan Jarvis would be John Healey’s replacement.
Mr Jarvis, who previously served as the security minister in the Home Office, served as an officer in the Parachute Regiment from 1997 to 2011.
The former Army officer has been MP for Barnsley North since 2011, and has been deployed to Kosovo, Northern Ireland, Iraq and Afghanistan.
In his first statement since the crisis began today, Sir Keir said: ‘My first duty is to keep the British people safe, and I will always do what is necessary to protect our national security.
John Healey dramatically quit earlier today as Labour’s defence shambles turned into a nightmare
Mr Healey said in his resignation letter that he could not accept the settlement in the Defence Investment Plan because it did not give the military the ‘resources they need’
‘I am pleased to appoint Dan Jarvis as defence secretary as we strengthen our armed forces and meet the growing threats facing our country.
‘This Labour government is delivering the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War.
‘In a dangerous and volatile world, we will give our armed forces the capabilities they need to defend Britain and keep our nation secure.’
As Sir Keir’s grip on power loosened today, allies of Andy Burnham immediately praised Mr Healey’s ‘principled’ stance, saying his ‘integrity is beyond question’.
Labour former defence secretaries Lord Hutton and Geoff Hoon broke cover to brand the situation a ‘car crash’ and urge MPs to drop their opposition to curbing welfare to free up cash.
Extraordinarily, a Treasury source suggested Mr Healey had been effectively demanding cuts to schools and hospitals, arguing that Ms Reeves ‘will always do what is right and needed to keep this country safe’.
In his reply to Mr Healey’s resignation letter, Sir Keir insisted the Defence Investment Plan would keep Britain safe as he rejected suggestions he is skimping on military spending.
The PM said the plan would deliver ‘an unprecedented increase in defence spending in a sustainable way’ and give the Armed Forces ‘necessary investment’, but suggested going further or faster would require ‘irresponsible borrowing’.
A Government source had earlier tried to shore up Sir Keir’s premiership this afternoon, saying the ‘country is safe’ because of the decisions he had made.
‘We cut the international aid budget to make record investment in our armed forces, and now the PM is imposing cuts on other government departments to fund billions more,’ the source said.
Downing Street is still scrambling to find a replacement, with security minister Dan Jarvis among those tipped for the job.
No10 had hoped the blueprint to modernise the military and shore up budgets could finally be unveiled this morning, ahead of the PM meeting fellow leaders at an international summit next week.
However, that prospect was humiliatingly dashed as the Treasury and Cabinet ministers play hardball over how to find the funding.
The PM’s inability to get the measures over the line highlights his waning authority, with Mr Burnham widely expected to mount a challenge if he wins the Makerfield by-election next week.
One gloomy Government aide told the Daily Mail there would be no end to the ‘paralysis’ until Sir Keir is replaced.
Kemi Badenoch said it was proof Sir Keir’s ‘premiership is falling apart’. ‘He can’t run the country. He is paralysed because his backbenchers only want to spend money on welfare,’ she said.
Reacting to the two resignations today, former Tory defence secretary Ben Wallace said: ‘Al was one of my very best commanders when I was in post. The MoD needs him.
‘This government needs his knowledge and leadership. If No 10 won’t listen to him and [former defence secretary John] Healey, we really are screwed.’