Defence-spending revolt: Healey and Carns quit, accelerating Starmer's fall
Two defence resignations on 11 June reframe the collapse as policy-driven, not just poll panic
Summary
On 11 June 2026, amid disputes over the government's planned defence spending, Defence Secretary John Healey and Armed Forces Minister Al Carns resigned — part of the cabinet-departure wave that, with dismal May local-election results and Reform UK's surge, forced Keir Starmer out 11 days later. The episode reframes the United Kingdom premier's fall as defence-and-policy driven, not purely a response to Reform's poll lead. It is the trigger event behind Starmer quits, handing Britain its seventh prime minister in a decade and the succession contest now centred on Burnham in Burnham closes on Downing Street as the Labour contest turns to a coronation.
By the numbers
- 11 June 2026 — Healey and Carns resign over defence spending.
- 22 June 2026 — Starmer resigns, 11 days later.
- May 2026 — local-election losses that opened the crisis.
- 1 — issue (defence spending) at the centre of the precipitating resignations.
Why it matters
The defence resignations show the collapse had a policy core, not just a polling one: a fight over how much Britain spends on its military, at a moment of US drawdown and European rearmament, helped topple a sitting prime minister. It frames the spending question the next PM inherits.
What to watch
- The published resignation letters and the exact spending dispute.
- Whether Burnham revisits the defence-spending plans.
- How the departures reshape the next cabinet.