UK News
UK defence spending plan ‘well short of what’s required’ and harder choices needed, says John Healey – UK politics live | Politics
Healey says defence needs more than ‘incremental change’
Healey says the government has been working 12 months on the defence investment plan.
Since the SDR [strategic defence review] we’ve seen the world changing still faster, with threats increasing and demands on defence, rising conflict in the Middle East, new Nato missions in the High North, the US moving forces away from Europe, intensifying attacks in Ukraine and increasing Russian aggression towards the UK.
Nato has now said we must prepare for war with Russia within the next five years.
This is the age of hard power and rising threat. This is not the moment for calibration or incremental change.
This means bigger politics, bolder priorities, harder choices.
Key events
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Healey says UK needs ‘bigger view of national security’
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Healey says DIP ‘well short of what’s required’, and UK’s enemies ‘don’t follow timetable set by Treasury’
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Healey says defence needs more than ‘incremental change’
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Healey says he thinks his resignation will ‘in time’ help ensure defence gets more funding
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John Healey delivers statement on his resignation to MPs
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710 migrants arrived in small boats on Monday, figures show – but overall arrivals down 40% on same point in 2025
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UK will have to ‘dial back’ military plans without more funding, says chief of defence staff
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Having Burnham, not Starmer, as leader would give Labour 4-point boost against Reform UK, poll suggests
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Greens condemn Streeting’s call for Rosebank and Jackdaw drilling as ‘environmentally reckless’
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Burnham’s approval ratings down since he launched byelection campaign, but still far better than his rivals’, polls show
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Starmer should set out timetable for his departure if Burnham wins byelection, Streeting says
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Starmer says Dan Jarvis, new defence secretary, being consulted on DIP ahead of final version being published
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Starmer says arson attacks on property linked to him should be seen in ‘broader context’ of Russian threat
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Streeting warns against ‘expensive’ pledges in leadership contest, and defends bond markets, in dig at Burnham
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Healey says UK needs ‘bigger view of national security’
Healey said he was grateful to cabinet colleagues who agreed to cuts to fund higher defence spending.
He went on:
There are credible ways of meeting the mid-term funding challenges, working multinationally and as other nations in Europe are doing.
They could allow us to protect the ability to deliver our Labour missions across government.
Healey also calls for a different approach to defence.
We need a bigger view of national security. It’s not just the job for defence or the agencies. Every department has a part to play in national security and national resilience.
From energy to transport to health, security must run through the government like letters through a stick of rock.
And security must be felt in the communities right across Britain, reversing long term decline and bringing new jobs and new hope.
At the start of his speech Healey said that, now he was no longer defence secretary, he was glad he did not have to sleep with three phones by his bed. He ended with a joke about his personal love for HP sauce.
For now, Jackie [Healey’s wife] is just grateful I no longer carry three phones in my bag, although I do still have my bottle of HP sauce.
Healey says DIP ‘well short of what’s required’, and UK’s enemies ‘don’t follow timetable set by Treasury’
Healey said Keir Starmer knows what is needed.
The prime minister knows what the country needs for defence. He spelled out the threat this month when he said it is our intelligence assessment and the assessment of other countries in NATO that there could be an attack by Russia on Nato as soon as 2030.
So Britain must set the head mark of spending 3% on defence in 2030, and a clear path to 3.5% in 2035.
The commitment all Nato nations have made to each other and to their people … commands wide cross-party support.
Our predecessors in this house experienced what happens when deterrence fails. Our predecessors in this House entrusted us with institutions like Nato that they created to keep us safe.
We don’t choose the circumstances in which we serve or the responsibilities that fall upon us, either in this house or in government.
And it’s the duty of our political generation now to ready Britain for the uncertainties of the years to come. The decisions that we make in the months ahead will be judged by those who follow us.
At this dangerous time. I see the current defence investment plans falling well short of what is required, a rise of 0.08% from next year to 2030.
No date for reaching 3%, no path to 3.5% by 2030.
Well over half of Nato members will be spending 3% or more. And when allies are looking for British leadership, we must not fall behind.
When NATO needs European nations to step up, we must not fall short.
Our adversaries don’t follow timetable set by the Treasury.
Healey says defence needs more than ‘incremental change’
Healey says the government has been working 12 months on the defence investment plan.
Since the SDR [strategic defence review] we’ve seen the world changing still faster, with threats increasing and demands on defence, rising conflict in the Middle East, new Nato missions in the High North, the US moving forces away from Europe, intensifying attacks in Ukraine and increasing Russian aggression towards the UK.
Nato has now said we must prepare for war with Russia within the next five years.
This is the age of hard power and rising threat. This is not the moment for calibration or incremental change.
This means bigger politics, bolder priorities, harder choices.
Healey says he it was a privilege to serve as defence secretary.
And he stresses his commitment to Labour.
I’ve been a Labour MP for nearly 30 years, a Labour team member for 45 years, a trade unionist for longer still.
It is my family, literally. Jackie, my wife worked for Labour HQ. We met at a union conference. Two weeks later we were engaged.
He says he only wanted a successful Labour government.
He says he is proud of the party’s record on defence.
I’m proud of what we’ve done in less than two years as a Labour government.
We stepped up into national leadership for Ukraine. We’ve raised defence investment three years earlier than anyone expected, won record defence export deals, given the armed forces their biggest pay rise for 20 years, brought 36,000 forces family homes back into public ownership, and we’ve signed major defence agreements with Germany, Norway, France and the European Union delivering for defence, delivering for Britain.
Healey says he thinks his resignation will ‘in time’ help ensure defence gets more funding
Healey says he thinks his resignation will help get the MoD more funding.
I took the decision to resign with the very greatest regret and reluctance. I continue to be certain about this decision.
In time I believe it will be seen as necessary in securing the future of our armed forces and of our alliances.
John Healey delivers statement on his resignation to MPs
John Healey is delivering a personal statement to MPs on his resignation last week as defence secretary.
He starts:
Many in the media have pressed me to say more since Thursday, but I’m a proud parliamentarian.
I wanted first to speak in this house as I take my seat, as I take my seat on the backbenches for the first time for more than 10 years.
710 migrants arrived in small boats on Monday, figures show – but overall arrivals down 40% on same point in 2025
Some 710 migrants arrived in the UK on Monday after crossing the Channel, the highest number on a single day so far this year, the Press Association reports. PA says:
It follows a spell without crossings, with no migrants having made the journey between 1 June and 14 June.
The cumulative number of arrivals by small boats in 2026 now stands at 9,852, according to provisional figures from the Home Office.
This is down 40% on the equivalent point last year, when the total stood at 16,317.
It is also 14% below this point in 2024, when the total was 11,431.
There were 11 boats that arrived on Monday, which suggests an average of around 65 people per boat.
UK will have to ‘dial back’ military plans without more funding, says chief of defence staff
Britain will have to “dial back” on military operations and exercises in the next few years if the Ministry of Defence (MoD) does not receive extra funding from Downing Street and the Treasury, Rich Knighton, the chief of the defence staff, has told peers. Dan Sabbagh has the story.
Having Burnham, not Starmer, as leader would give Labour 4-point boost against Reform UK, poll suggests
The new polling from Ipsos released today also shows how people say they would vote given a choice between a Reform UK party led by Nigel Farage and a Labour party led by either Keir Starmer or Andy Burnham.
While Burnham is considerably more popular with voters than Starmer, these figures suggest that, were Burnham to become leader, there would be a significant, but not huge, rise in the number of people inclined to vote Labour.
The figures show a Starmer-led Labour party 9 points ahead of Reform, and a Burnham-led Labour party 13-points ahead.
Polling like this is particularly speculative, and ultimately it is very had to know how voters would react to a Burnham-led government because we don’t know what it would do. We don’t even know who the chancellor would be. But these figures imply that, while having Burnham as leader would help Labour electorally, his impact might be more incremental than transformative.
Greens condemn Streeting’s call for Rosebank and Jackdaw drilling as ‘environmentally reckless’
The Green party has criticised Wes Streeting for his call for new drilling to be allowed from the Rosebank and Jackdaw oil and gas fields in the North Sea. (See 10.44am.) Commenting on Streeting’s speech, Rachel Millward, the Greens’ co-deputy leader, said:
Wes Streeting has ceased to be relevant, but his so-called ‘progressive capitalism’ shows the degree to which fossil fuel corporations have their grubby hands all over Labour policy.
His call to open up new drilling in the North Sea is environmentally reckless and economically illiterate.
Rosebank alone contains enough fossil fuel to produce over 200 million tonnes of CO2 if burned – more than the combined annual emissions of 28 low-income countries.
Opening up these oilfields will do nothing to improve energy security or bring down bills either, because any oil and gas extracted will be sold at global prices on the world market.
Greenpeace UK also condemned the speech. Angharad Hopkinson, a Greenpeace campaigner, said:
Flogging more oil and gas from the North Sea to pay for cleaner energy sounds like a business scheme worthy of Del Boy. Any windfall from tax receipts would only be temporary because this basin is in terminal decline, not to mention the escalating costs in lives and money from more extreme weather. Streeting is backing the wrong horse several decades after it has bolted.
Burnham’s approval ratings down since he launched byelection campaign, but still far better than his rivals’, polls show
Andy Burnham has become less popular with British voters as a whole following his decision to stand as Labour’s candidate in the Markerfield byelection, according to two separate polls published today.
Burnham is still more popular than other Labour politicians. But the polling suggests some voters have become more negative about him as a result of his decision to put himself forward as a byelection candidate in the clear hope off being able to replace Keir Starmer.
Here are the figures from YouGov.
YouGov says:
In earlier polls in this series, Andy Burnham achieved a positive net favourability rating (+9 at its peak). However, his popularity declined starting from the middle of May – the period that encompassed the Labour party revolt against Keir Starmer that included Wes Streeting’s resignation and Josh Simons stepping down in Makerfield, triggering the by-election that Andy Burnham is likely to win.
As a result, Burnham now takes a net favourability rating of -11 in our latest poll: 30% of Britons like the would-be PM, versus 41% who dislike him.
The YouGov report also says Wes Streeting’s unfavourability ratings have risen since he resigned as health secretary with the intention of challenging Starmer for his job, and Ipsos in its report says it has picked up on the same trend.
According to Ipsos, Burnham’s ratings have fallen in particular with people over the age of 55, people who voted Conservative in 2024, people who think Labour is doing a bad job in government and people from Scotland.
However, the Ipsos report also shows that, of the 17 leading politicians it polled, Burnham has the highest – or least negative – favourability rating.
Starmer should set out timetable for his departure if Burnham wins byelection, Streeting says

Peter Walker
Peter Walker is a Guardian senior political correspondent.
Keir Starmer should set a timetable for his departure if Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield byelection on Thursday rather than battle to stay in Downing Street, Wes Streeting has said.
Answering questions after his speech on the economy (see 10.44am and 11.32am), Streeting reaffirmed that he would fight in any leadership battle, and insisted he has the necessary support among Labour MPs, but refused to say whether he would trigger a contest.
He said:
I would hope that after Thursday’s byelection, when the results are in, and I very much hope Andy Burnham wins … I hope the prime minister will at that stage reflect on his own position and set out a timetable. I think that would be a better way forward for everyone and would enable that better culture that we aspire to.
When he resigned as health secretary last month, Streeting had been expected to trigger a leadership contest himself, and the fact he did not prompted opponents to assume he did not have the backing of the 80 other Labour MPs needed to trigger the process.
Asked if he did now, Streeting replied: “Yes, I have the support I need to be on the ballot.”
However, he refused to say whether he might seek to trigger it next week. He said:
I think I’ve been extremely clear about this. I think there should be a contest. I have every intention of standing in that contest, and I’ve not triggered a contest, because we’ve got a byelection under way where one of the inevitable candidates is on the ballot paper.
To have sought a contest before Burnham was potentially back in parliament would be to “pull a fast one”, Streeting argued.
UK News
World Cup 2026: England turn on the style; Fifa denies ticketless fans breached security – live | World Cup 2026
Key events
Shall we dip into the BTL comments … Well, why not? The first and third of these are about England: apologies in advance.
The defence is getting a lot of stick for those two goals, but in truth it was the failure of the midfield to get control that led to them. There were too many occasions when there were wide open spaces, loose passes, possession lost in dangerous areas. But the worst aspect was the passivity, the lack of serious pressing. England haven’t got great central defenders so midfield protection is vital.
One of the positive things about the first round of matches has been the refereeing, they’ve clearly decided to officiate with a light touch and it’s so much better for the game when they don’t blow up for every little bit of contact. Players have already realised they’re not getting free kicks by exaggerating every touch and they’re getting short shrift if they’re rolling about on the floor for no reason. Add in the fact that VAR isn’t trying to re-referee every game and I think they’ve got it pretty much spot on so far with their approach. Let’s hope it continues.
For a first game I thought England were fine. The fact we had some gears we could go through and some real power to bring off the bench bodes well. And it’s nice to see a bit of oomph after the years of Southgate tedium. Not sure Stones as first choice centrehalf is sustainable though – he’s not played all season and for all his silkiness I think will just be phased out for the more mobile Guehi.
Good too to see England’s two best players (Kane and Bellingham) actually looking fit and sharp. They were both shadows of themselves in the last tournament and if we’re going to do anything here we’ll need both with energy at the sharp end of the knock-outs.
There was more than a touch of “jibbing in” for England’s opener, if eyewitness reports of lax security and ticket checks are to be believed. And why shouldn’t they be?
Fifa has played down reports that ticketless England supporters were able to gain entry for the World Cup opener against Croatia after evading security checks at the Dallas Stadium.
An unspecified number of fans without tickets are said to have made their way into the ground despite a huge security operation being put in place at the home of the Dallas Cowboys in Arlington. Officials said that snipers were in place inside the stadium, with the Arlington police department deploying “highly trained personnel and specialised resources” at the venue.
But despite those measures and some fans having paid thousands of pounds for tickets, there were widespread reports of supporters without tickets gaining access.
The England midfielder Jude Bellingham believes playing with a “chip on my shoulder” will bring the best out of him at the World Cup.
Bellingham scored the vital third goal as Thomas Tuchel’s side opened their campaign with a 4-2 win over Croatia in the Group L clash in Dallas.
There were uncertainty surrounding Bellingham’s inclusion in Tuchel’s squad for the tournament in North America after missing the September and October camps through injury.
That followed last summer’s international window which ended in Tuchel saying his mother found Bellingham’s behaviour “repulsive”, while his ability (or perceived lack thereof) to buy into Tuchel’s “brotherhood” has also come under scrutiny.
Bellingham was chosen ahead of his friend Morgan Rogers in the No 10 position, before switching to a deeper role, and made an early mark in the tournament.
“For me personally, it was nice to put some of the noise aside and just show my country and my teammates how committed I am to help us try to win football matches,” he told BBC Sport.
“It was a great team performance. Second half, we got things right, first half we got the intensity right, but not quite with the ball and second half we put it all together nicely.
“To contribute, to help my team and help my country is one of the biggest honours and regardless of the noise outside, that honour doesn’t change for me at all.
“It has been a tough season for me but I am feeling fresh and sharp and stronger.
“I have got a little bit of a chip on my shoulder. That helps me a lot to find that focus early in the game and to find that intensity.
“I know that it’s part of being a footballer and I don’t hold a grudge against anyone who says bad things about me because sometimes I do deserve it.
“Today, it was nice to try to show people and remind people what I’m about.” PA Media
A fresh England line hot off the wires coming right up …
If by some bizarre chance you missed it, here’s a gallery of some of the best images from England 4-2 Croatia:
And here is reaction from Harry Kane, Jude Bellingham and Tommy Tuchel:

Jonathan Liew
I fell asleep at some point during the Netherlands v Japan game. It had been a hot and drowsy day by the shores of Lake Annecy, a square and heavy heat, where the sun and the driving and the food and the boxed wine gently squeeze all the life from your body, like air being pressed out of a juice carton.
I remember Virgil van Dijk angling a header into the far corner, and when I came to it was 2-1, and everyone was heading to bed, drunk on tiredness, drunk on life, drunk on drink.
Not all of my friends care for football in any case, and so the World Cup had become a kind of mood music, something to fill the silences in conversation. Through the long and meandering chat about home renovations and Andy Burnham, an indistinct French voice occasionally cut through from a different universe. Maeda. Gravenberch. The Low Countries tempted to attain the final for the first time since 2010. My French isn’t great. Someone prised open a bottle of Heineken. Bodies draped themselves over the couch, fingers scrolled through phones, the immaculate decadence of boredom.

Jacob Steinberg
When Thomas Tuchel won the Champions League with Chelsea in 2021 the success was built on unflinching defensive rigour and midfield discipline. Five years on, though, Tuchel’s England displayed neither of those qualities during a dreadful first half in Dallas. They kept losing the ball in dangerous areas, struggled to maintain their shape without the ball and were rocking when Croatia stung them with a second equaliser just before half-time.
The vibe could hardly have been less convincing. Anthony Barry, Tuchel’s No 2, let rip in an interview with ITV, accusing England of doing all the wrong things, of playing with “a nervous energy”, of making everything “confused and complicated” against opponents well versed in making their craft and experience in midfield count.
Of course, England got away with it in the end, the response in the second half astonishing, Barry’s words no doubt delivered in even stronger terms by Tuchel in the dressing room. Yet while they won their opening game in Group L thanks to a moment of breathtaking power from Jude Bellingham and a late breakaway goal from Marcus Rashford, the overall display was far from good enough.
If you think everything in England’s garden is rosy after banging in four goals against Croatia, Jacob Steinberg has some news for you …
There really is quite a lot of football occurring.
Ghana celebrated a 1-0 win against Panama in Toronto, joining England atop Group L:
And in Group K, Jonathan Wilson witnessed Colombia beating Uzbekistan 3-1, down in Mexico City:
“Let’s have it off,” one excited England fan told Sky Sports News outside the stadium after England’s victory.
Doesn’t he mean “Let’s have it”?
I wish I could say I will be speaking from a position of authority on England’s win against Croatia, but I was on a plane, coming home from Spain.
Therefore, your emails, in which you tell me what happened, and offer your first-class analysis, are going to be particularly important this morning. Get involved.
Mexican military forces intercepted and brought down a drone that flew near the South Korea team’s training camp ahead of its World Cup match against Mexico, a federal official told the Associated Press.
Military forces used specialised equipment to detect an “unregistered drone” near the South Korean camp, prompting them to “neutralise” it, the Mexican federal agent said.
Preamble
England are quite good, it would seem, after their opening Group L 4-2 win against Croatia:
While the rest of the world waits for England to be bad – or at least suffer a heartbreaking penalty shootout defeat against Argentina, or someone – their fans are certainly going to enjoy the next few weeks …
Let’s all talk about the World Cup!
UK News
Voters in Scotland head to the polls for Westminster by-elections
Residents in Aberdeen South and Arbroath and Broughty Ferry are choosing new members of parliament.
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As Spielberg confirms whether ET was ‘slimy or dry’, we enter a new age of the celebrity interview | Film
For the most part, Steven Spielberg has avoided most of the indignities of the modern day press tour. He hasn’t had to subject himself to any spicy chicken wings, or summon any witticisms when presented with a cloche-covered sausage roll. Unlike many other celebrities, he hasn’t chosen to promote Disclosure Day by answering softball questions while simultaneously fashioning a Lionel Richie-style clay approximation of himself for YouTube. For this he should be applauded.
Instead, Spielberg has spent this promotional cycle on something more suited to his stature. A maestro tour, if you will, on which he gets to position Disclosure Day against a body of work that is second to none. Publications have run long oral histories about his entire career. He was a guest during the prestigious final week of Stephen Colbert’s talkshow. He was interviewed by the New York Times about the exact texture of ET’s skin.
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That last one really did happen. A clip of the interview has gone mildly viral, featuring interviewer Rachel Abrams straight-out asking Spielberg “Was ET slimy or dry?” before suggesting that this is a decades-old conundrum that had long foxed everyone she knows. To his credit, Spielberg answered the question with tremendous gusto, if a little bewilderment. “ET was a little moist but never slimy,” he replied, after shaking his head. He then explained that, while “ET was only dry when he got sick”, it would be wrong to call him slimy. Xenomorphs are slimy, he pointed out. “ET never had tendrils of drool.”
Now, why Abrams asked this question is another matter. The good faith interpretation is that Spielberg has spent the last half-century in the public eye, and been interviewed so many times that he has developed a tendency to become something of an anecdote jukebox, reeling out the hits unprompted. This is something that afflicts only the truly famous but it can be debilitating. There are, after all, only so many times that a person can hear Ringo Starr’s “I thought it was you three” story.
Viewed from this perspective, there is real value in extracting genuinely new information from A-list celebrities. The fact that ET is now canonically moist maybe adds something to the cultural conversation that wasn’t there before? If so, the question deserves to be commended. However, if Abrams just asked a deliberately dumb question to the director of Schindler’s List because she knew it would get clicks, then that is another matter entirely.
We must also question why the subject arose in the first place. Abrams’s justification that it was in the public interest, since it had long been a discussion within her social group, rings a little false, because presumably everyone in her social group has eyes and can see perfectly well for themselves that ET isn’t slimy. It’s right there! All through the film! We know what texture ET’s skin is because ET is a visible character throughout the entire movie. As everybody knows, ET’s skin is clearly pleather or pleather-adjacent, like the skin of a Mediterranean grandmother. There is certainly no slime there. If there was, then the film would have included a scene of Drew Barrymore skidding about in ET’s slug trail, or the climatic hug scene between ET and Elliott would have ended with Elliott looking down at his slime-covered clothes and tutting, “These were new on today.”
But none of that happened so we can reasonably ascertain that ET isn’t slimy and this was a stupid question to ask. Still, the new media landscape loves nothing more than a replicable format, so perhaps this is something we’ll see more of in the future. For all we know, the New York Times is working on a series called Famous Auteurs Answer Self-Evident Questions as we speak, and this time next week they’ll drag Martin Scorsese in to ask if Jake LaMotta had 12 ears, or Paul Thomas Anderson to ask if Daniel Day-Lewis is secretly a mouse. For the avoidance of doubt, I hope this happens.
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