Cabinet ministers asked to look for cuts to fund UK defence spending increase
The Guardian reported on June 14 that UK cabinet ministers have been asked to look for spending cuts to fund an increase in defence spending.
At a glance
- The Guardian reported on June 14 that cabinet ministers were asked to identify cuts to fund higher UK defence spending.
- Lisa Nandy said discussions were under way on keeping the country safe after John Healey's resignation.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
Cabinet ministers have been asked to look for spending cuts to fund an increase in United Kingdom defence spending, The Guardian reported on 14 June.
According to the Guardian report, Lisa Nandy said discussions were taking place about how to “keep this country safe” following John Healey's resignation as defence secretary. The request to ministers places the burden of the defence uplift on savings found elsewhere in departmental budgets, per the report's framing, rather than on new revenue — though the mechanics are not spelled out in the material supplied.
What is on the record: the instruction to cabinet ministers to identify cuts, Nandy's confirmation that discussions were under way, and the context of Healey's departure from the Ministry of Defence. What remains unconfirmed: the scale of the intended increase, the departments expected to absorb reductions, the circumstances of Healey's resignation, and any Treasury timetable. The Guardian's account indicates the discussions were live rather than concluded at the time of publication.
Key facts on file
- The Guardian reported on June 14 that cabinet ministers were asked to identify cuts to fund higher UK defence spending.
- Lisa Nandy said discussions were under way on keeping the country safe after John Healey's resignation.