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.

double quotation markThe 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.

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Starmer insists he’s proved his critics wrong ‘many times before’, as he again says he won’t ‘walk away’ from being PM

Keir Starmer has again insisted that he will fight any challenge to his leadership. At ITV reports, speaking at the G7 summit, Starmer said:

double quotation markSo very many times on my political journey people have said to me ‘it’s not possible.’

They said it’s not possible to turn the Labour party around, it’s not possible to win an election, it’s not possible if you do win an election to invest in your public services and stabilise the economy. Wrong every time.

And that’s why I intend not to walk away from this, but to carry on with what I was elected to do, which is to serve this country and bring back the change that people desperately need in their lives.

Starmer is expected to face a leadership challenge if Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield byelection on Thursday. In a BBC interview at the end of last week, Starmer said he accepted he would have to “turn things around” if he wanted to fight another election as Labour leader. These comments suggest he genuinely believes he could do that.

Many others in his party are not so sure.

Left to right: Donald Trump, Emmanuel Macron and Keir Starmer at the G7 summit. Photograph: Ludovic Marin/AFP/Getty Images
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