Dan Jarvis has been appointed secretary of state for defence following a day of upheaval in which his predecessor, the armed forces minister and a parliamentary aide all resigned in protest at the government’s defence spending plans.

The Barnsley North MP, a former Parachute Regiment officer who served in Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, was confirmed in the role by Downing Street on Thursday evening, less than an hour after armed forces minister Al Carns walked out of government and just hours after John Healey dramatically quit as defence secretary in a dispute with Number 10 and the Treasury over the funding settlement behind the long delayed Defence Investment Plan.

His appointment makes him the first defence secretary since Ben Wallace to bring direct military experience to the post, and he arrives with arguably the deepest operational background of any holder of the office in the modern era.

How the day unfolded

Mr Healey resigned on Thursday morning after receiving a financial settlement for the Defence Investment Plan which he said fell well short of what the armed forces require, and which he claimed the prime minister had been unable, and the Treasury unwilling, to improve.

Under the proposal, defence spending would rise from 2.6% of GDP next year to just 2.68% by 2030, which is understood to amount to an uplift of around £13.5bn, less than half of the £28bn that service chiefs had reportedly said was needed to fund the transformation set out in the Strategic Defence Review.

In his resignation letter, Mr Healey warned that the settlement would force him to take decisions that would reduce the readiness of the armed forces, increase the risk to personnel on operations and could make the country less safe. He argued that while the government has committed to spending 3.5% of GDP on defence by 2035, the trajectory set out in the plan moved far too slowly, with the heaviest pressure to improve warfighting readiness falling in the next two years rather than over the next decade.

Mr Carns, a former Royal Marines officer, followed him out of the door on Thursday evening, telling the prime minister in a blunt resignation letter that he had sat in the rooms, seen the assessments and spoken to the commanders who would be asked to do more with less, and that he could not in good conscience stand at the dispatch box and defend a level of investment he knew to be inadequate to the task. He added that a serious country funds its defence to meet the threat it actually faces rather than the threat it wishes it faced, while parliamentary private secretary Pamela Nash also resigned, citing the delays and difficulties in securing funding for the plan.

Sir Keir Starmer rejected the criticism, insisting that the Defence Investment Plan will provide the resources the military needs to keep the country safe, along with the clarity the British defence industry needs to plan and the certainty required to attract private finance. Announcing the appointment of Mr Jarvis, the prime minister said his first duty was to keep the British people safe, and described his government as delivering the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War.

That is the political backdrop against which the new defence secretary takes office, because he must now own, finalise and defend in parliament the very settlement that prompted two fellow veterans to walk out of the department he has been asked to lead.

Who is Dan Jarvis?

For readers of this publication, Mr Jarvis requires considerably less introduction than most politicians who arrive at Main Building.

Commissioned into the Parachute Regiment, he served as a platoon commander with 1 PARA, as aide-de-camp to General Sir Mike Jackson and as adjutant of 3 PARA, before working as a staff planner at the Permanent Joint Headquarters and at Army Headquarters following his promotion to major. He went on to command a company in the Special Forces Support Group, and he was appointed MBE for his military service.

In 2011 he became the first person since the Second World War to resign his commission in order to contest a parliamentary by-election, which he won to become the Labour MP for Barnsley Central. He served in a series of shadow frontbench roles, sat on the Joint Committee on the National Security Strategy between 2017 and 2019, and in 2018 was elected the first mayor of South Yorkshire, steering the region through the pandemic and severe flooding before returning to the Commons full time.

He was appointed shadow security minister in September 2023 and, following Labour’s victory at the 2024 general election, served as security minister in the Home Office, where he led on counter terrorism policy including the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act, better known as Martyn’s Law. Boundary changes mean he has represented Barnsley North since 2024.

Where he stands on defence

His record suggests a politician planted firmly in the mainstream of Labour’s pro-defence tradition, and one who has at times been well ahead of his party on the issue.

He voted in favour of renewing the nuclear deterrent, backing the replacement of Trident with a new system during the 2015 to 2016 parliament, and during the Corbyn years he went as far as hinting that he might have to leave the party altogether if it abandoned its commitment to the deterrent. In December 2015 he was one of the most prominent Labour voices making the case for RAF airstrikes against the so-called Islamic State in Syria, arguing publicly that the case for action outweighed the case for inaction, a position that drew heavily on his own experience of commanding troops in Afghanistan.

His wider voting record shows a loyalist, with TheyWorkForYou recording a 97% alignment with fellow Labour MPs over the past year across more than 300 divisions, although he has rebelled when he judged it necessary, most notably by opposing a second Brexit referendum at a time when most comparable Labour colleagues supported one. During the Corbyn era he was repeatedly touted as a potential leadership challenger from the moderate wing of the party, although he ultimately declined to enter the contest.

The in-tray

The new defence secretary inherits a formidable workload, with the immediate priority being the Defence Investment Plan itself, which the government had reportedly hoped to publish this week before the resignations intervened. Beyond that sit the delivery of last year’s Strategic Defence Review, the task of sustaining support to Ukraine, the need to reassure allies ahead of key NATO engagements, and the longstanding pressures on personnel retention, equipment availability and readiness that his predecessor cited on his way out of the building.

He will also need to steady a department in which, by the accounts of those who have just left it, military chiefs believe the funding on offer falls dramatically short of the task, while veterans’ organisations have already warned that personnel will be looking for leadership in the wake of Mr Healey’s departure.

There is an obvious personal political risk in accepting the job, because his credibility in Westminster and within the armed forces community rests substantially on his service record and on his reputation for speaking plainly about defence. If he concludes, as Mr Healey and Mr Carns did, that the settlement is inadequate, he will face the same choice they faced, and if he defends it, he will be asked why his judgement differs from that of two fellow veterans.

What is not in doubt is that the Ministry of Defence is once again led by someone who has carried a bergen, commanded soldiers on operations and planned campaigns from inside PJHQ. Whether that experience translates into a better settlement for the armed forces is the question on which his tenure, and arguably the government’s wider credibility on defence, now depends.

George Allison
George Allison is the founder and editor of the UK Defence Journal. He holds a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and specialises in naval and cyber security topics. George has appeared on national radio and television to provide commentary on defence and security issues. Twitter: @geoallison

51 COMMENTS

  1. He has the CV for it. But if he tries to pass this sham off as good for the military instead of following Healey out the door, then it’s betrayal of the highest order

      • Me too, once he’s had a look at the detail in the DIP he walks out the door. Rather think we might be disappointed on that front

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      • Yes, that will get things done, then the Treasury and the PM’s office will be falling over themselves to give the MoD any money it wants 😀

        We need to get the DiP out no matter how much new money is in it or not, if we need to make cuts then so be it, the never ending paralysis and political instability is a far bigger threat to the nation and European security than any defence capability that £5 or £10 billion spent over five years could generate.

        • Jim, cuts to what? The armed forces are barely functioning. The PM needs to tell his Chancellor and the rest of his party that cuts will be made to Welfare to fund Defence. Apparently, working-age benefits have increased by over £50 billion since 2019. On the Money Saving Expert website it states that benefits are potentially payable to someone earning up to £50k in some circumstances. That’s ludicrous.

          • Plenty of stuff to cut or reduce

            air mobility,
            Strategic air lift
            The Rangers
            armoured recce
            special forces support group
            light artillery,
            the Gurkhas,
            attack helicopters,
            fleet solid stores (3 to 2)

            None of that would have much impact on UK security or NATO commitments.

            • 🙄
              Might as well disarm and finish the job.
              We went through each of those in turn the other day, waste of an hour of my life typing clearly.

            • I don’t really comment on this site much, but love reading what more informed people have to say. But by god Jim you come out with some right verbal manure…. Cut back on those?? Everything has already been cut back to the bare minimum.. I honestly hope you say this crap just for a reaction and done really believe it

            • Umm Jim

              We are an island.. airmobile forces and capabilities are fundamentally important.. Russia loves grey warfare so special forces are core.. we are an island so solid support ships are core.. one of the things that Ukraine has shown is more recce and more recce.. Ukrainian forces are massively recce heavy.

            • Could I amend your list a bit Jim as I think you had significant typographical errors:

              Eliminate the overseas aid budget.
              Eliminate the triple pensions lock.
              Eliminate quangos (third of government spending through unelected quangos).
              Substantially reduce welfare spending on the feckless and lazy. if you are fit an healthy then you have 3 months of benefits and then they are stopped immediately if you reject any job you are offered.
              Eliminate aid and support for asylum seekers (send them back to Europe). This includes zero legal aid for them.
              Eliminate the net zero agenda from DESNEZ

              There I think I fixed your list now.

      • That would be fantastic if he took up the post just to resign within a week. That would show up how inept this government is….Red Ed has sunk two tier, free gear Sir Kier below the waterline….just like our type 83 destroyer plans….still the UK has plenty of rubber dinghies now as well as a an army/navy pf military age young men…I guess that is the defence investment plan….i.e., get third world young men to bring dinghies to the UK and provide for our new invigorated army and navy. What a brilliant plan that is as we can still spend £333 billion on welfare (10.6% of GDP) and £8 billion on overseas aid. Still we are a “soft-in-the-head” power….we should be thankful for that though as we provide benefits and health care for all around the world….

    • Totally agree and to be honest he should only have accepted the post if the funds were promised up front.

    • No he doesn’t, his job is merely to get the DiP published and out of the way before the NATO summit and steady the ship before the labour leadership election in a few months. After that he will be out of a job.

      What ever internal dialogue there was between The Treasury, The MoD and the PM’s office is done. The MoD has permanently f**ked itself by over reaching because it thought it was in a stronger political position than it was.

      In 2024 moving to 2.7% of GDP on defence spending would have been the MoD’s wildest dream. A sum far in excess of what the last government was prepared to spend. Despite that rise they have managed to cause a political scandal big enough to loose a Secretary of State a PM and a Chancellor.

      Granted all three needed to go but it means anyone else coming in after, be it Burnham, Badenoch or Farrage will stay well clear of defence spending. There are no votes in it and even when increasing the budget it’s now a political negative.

      • I’m not sure, I think it may catapult it more into awareness and make it a bit more real for whoever takes over from starmer and reaves.. in the end Healey and Carns who both have their power groups within the party can now freely leaver these to get concessions from whoever is going to be the next leader.

        • Believe me when I tell you John Healey has no power group in the Labour Party. He is one of the most forgettable people you will ever meet. He was entirely a Starmer appointment.

          There will be no concessions to anyone after this unless Starmar makes them and from what I read today Starmar has already put this to bed. The funding is set and the MoD will have to cuts some programs to live inside the budget. They will get the extra £13.5 billion rising the budget to just under 2.7% of GDP and that’s it.

      • arty politics again Jiom. Where did you get 2.7 per cent from. Dfence spending next year is forecast to be 2.6 and only reach 2.68 in 2030. In real cash terms that means that the budget is going to reduce over the same period.

        • Hi Geoff is 2.68% not just below 2.7%? Is that not what I said?

          Can you explain where you get the budget reducing in real cash terms from please? I haven’t seen that one anywhere. Whats your source?

  2. If I were in his shoes I would acceept the plan publicly and state that I would be pushing for the remainder that is needed. I would do this on the basis that this moderate increase is better than no increase at all, but would publicly lay out the compromises that now need to be made and the risk being held.

  3. It won’t work out good for the forces labour will protect benefit spending at all cost and certainly won’t lower Net Zero or money to support illegal immigrants.

    • The push for net zero is only good for the economy.
      Fastest growing sector after AI and gives us cheaper energy than fossil fuels, while reducing our exposure to things like the closure of the Straits of Hormuz.

      • It doesn’t though does it ? Never that simple. Energy companies bid for contracts. Whosever gets in last with the highest bid, the rest are paid otherwise why bid at all. There was an extensive article about this on BBC, wherein solar is doing well but UK isn’t a solar country. Wind turbines on other hand are still rather niche and expensive to setup. If net zero is making things cheap, NOONE is seeing it. Wake Up ! FFS. Stop using the name Spock, you are disgrace to common sense let alone logic.

        • “Wake up” – the universal call of conspiracy theorists, whether they are anti-vaxxers, flat-earthers, or climate-change deniers.

          You might be whinging that you’re not seeing cheaper electricity, but what you’re not seeing is the more expensive electricity we would have if we were not using renewables. The U.K. has the highest electricity costs in Europe primarily because we burn more natural-gas to generate electricity than other nation.
          Wind turbines are not “niche”. Most days that’s where the majority of U.K. electricity comes. Unfortunately we haven’t eliminated the burning of gas, which means our prices are still too high.

          As for the U.K. “not being a solar country”, that’s simply not true. Solar panels are most efficient in temperatures of 20C to 25C. They don’t need the searing temperatures and cloud-free skies of the Sahara.

          BTW stop using the name Glyn, it makes you sound like a human rather than the odious pile of shit that you are.

        • Did you really just describe wind turbines as niche? Well over half of our power comes from wind and that is growing massively year on year. Add in some storage capacity and the prices will crash. I really struggle to see why anyone would support oil and gas as an energy source after the debacle caused by the closure of the Straight of Hormuz.

      • Levi, State Pension Triple-Lock won’t be changed until after the GE in 2029. Then anybody with a brain (!) will remove NAE and take an average of RPI and CPI. Much, much bigger deal is the amount of ‘working age’ benefits being paid. There’s about 2.8 million people signed-off as long-term sick. Even those that are working can often claim additional benefits and Money Saving Expert website uses an example of being able to claim benefits when someone is earning up to £50k!

        • In the end the quickest and easiest biggest amount is simply making the state pension means tested.. simply you don’t get state pension over the highter rate tax threshold.. that’s about 10 billion a year starting next year..

          • Then all of us who have been paying NICs for 30 or 40 years will be marching in Whitehall. It’ll be like the ‘Poll Tax’ protests that Thatcher endured. We have a ‘contract’; we’re all supposed to pay in and everybody who’s paid in is supposed to get someone back.
            Much fairer to stop people getting money out of Welfare who’ve paid little or nothing in. The DWP have a record of everybody’s NIC record, you can register on the Government Gatewsy and view yours. Limit working-age benefits to what you’ve paid in would be easy and fair. We won’t have 2.8 million long term sick anymore.

            • And that’s the thing.. it’s my right it’s my right… until this country actually goes no it not we get no place.. it was every child’s right to get child benefits until it was not.. there is no place for universal benefits.

              Most importantly you did not contribute to your pension you paid for your parents and grand parents to have a pension and many many people paid nowhere near enough NI contributions to ever cover the pension they get..look how much it costs to buy a 10,000k triple locked pension on the open market.. it’s going to be about £300,000.. you get that even if your NI contributions were a couple of hundred pounds a year.. one year when I was young I got a full years contribution with £80s.. so no we don’t have a right to a full state pension it’s a benefit.. and unless us older people get off our high horses we are the problem not the wise heads that show the solution.

              • I’m in agreement with your sentiment but not your unilateral implementation. If you want to phase in a new system, so be it. Whilst none of us were promised PIPs and Universal Credit, we were promised a pension for our NICs.
                There’s about 1 million pensioners who are higher rate taxpayers. If you stop their State Pension, that might raise £12.5 billion a year. Meanwhile, the annual bill for UC is £99 billion and PIP is about £56 billion. There could be huge savings made in revisiting these benefits that are clearly out of control.

                • To me being a utilitarian I would also means test pip payments with the same test.. simple test really if your a higher rate tax payer you don’t get any support full stop.

                  I would also make everyone out of work who receives benefits undertake some public works, unless they had a specific health related “ cannot work at all card”.

                  Combine health and social care completely, scrap all the separate NHS trusts and simply have everything run by health authorities ( essentially scrap the entire internal market).

                  With that money saved ( and it’s a lot) I would fund defence and anything left over I would use in debt reduction.

            • Well said Rob, I don’t care if someone has earned £25k or £100k a year. If they’ve paid in, the should get something back!! I’m all for people who claim benefits as a way of life getting enough for utilities, basic food. And at a push free travel on public transport…. Christ I grew up in the 80s where we had basic food all the time because my dad didn’t always have work. We wouldn’t have had enough for takeouts or Holidays like all the freeloading scroungers now a days!! And as for the ones that sneak into this country they should all be put up on an island in the Outer Hibrides with nothing more than a tent and warm clothes and fed from a soup kitchen!! All that should save the state a few ££ to put towards the military and also discourage layabouts and illegals

              • But they did not pay Bob.. my personal pension I paid 9,000 a year into to get about 10,000.. the cost of a 10,000 pension is about £300,000 to £400,000.. your NI was a contribution to help pay for your parents and grandparents pensions.. not to pay for your own, it will be your children and grandchildren that have to pay for that.

                It’s my right.. I deserve it.. NO WE DONT.

                • You’re a tard aren’t you! I didn’t say they’re getting their own money back. I’m not thick I know who it works.. what I meant even though you’re to thick to realise is that if everyone pays into a system. Then at some point they’re entitled to get something out of that same system. Why should someone pay money all those years for dead beats to claim and when the time comes get nothing themselves.. let me guess you’re a Labour fanatic that thinks people with a bit of money should be taxed to high heaven or have all their possessions sold off to pay for the lazy feckless and unwanted in this country.

            • Don’t worry Rob C, National Insurance was never to pay for the basic state pension.

              NI started forty years before the basic state pension to pay for health and sickness pay.

              • Extract from the House of Commons Library: “The UK State Pension has been funded by and linked to National Insurance Contributions (NICs) since its creation under the National Insurance Act 1946, which came into effect in 1948. This link established the “contributory principle” where entitlement is based on an individual’s record of paid or credited”. That’s a long time before I started work.

            • You’re quite right that welfare is the easier, more moral and far more economically sensible target to go after.

              I have to disagree on the state pension though. You signed nothing and funded nothing, your NICs went into the tax system same as all your other tax. It’s a benefit and benefits can be taken away, especially when not needed (i.e., wealth pensioners, or ones sat on huge unrealised gains such as property). The state pension is an unproductive investment for the Treasury and has to be cut for those that do not need it

              • Levi, I’ll refer you to my recent post regarding the 1946 National Insurance Act. We’re all entitled to a State Pension if we’ve been paying NICs. I’m happy to see the Triple-lock go; we weren’t promised that and the link to NAE is particularly silly and unaffordable for today’s taxpayers (which, includes me) for a few more years.

  4. Best of luck to Dan Jarvis!

    When the idea of the DIP was first announced, I assumed that it would be MoD-authored but with the funding level dictated by HMT who were well aware that the intention of the DIP was to state in fine detail how the recommendations from the SDR could be funded and met, together with equipment and infrastructure programmes and personnel costs etc. I also expected HMT to exercise some sort of overwatch over the MoDs work.

    Now it is said that Healey and Carns had little input into the DIP and did not know until Monday what the ‘settlement figure’ from HMT was – £13.5bn. That is astonishing. How can a DIP be writtten over a long period (June 2025-May/June 2026?) without MoD ministers and DIP authors knowing how much cash is available?

    • What was telling the cairns interview in which he said it was not just the money but the fact the DIP focused on capabilities to fight the last war and not the lessons from Ukraine and the next war.. so it’s a double failure an out dated concept with to little funding.

  5. I think Mr Jarvis will be a good fit for Defence minister but the draw back like and elephants foreskin is he has to tow No10/No11’s line and I do not think he will last long trying to convince guys waiting for kit or in fact that there is no kit comming and trying to convince the guys that the government has their back he will do what Healey did and throw in the towel which is a shame as what the country needs is stability but that is one thing the people in the house of commons from all sides seem unable to give the country.

  6. He may be a fine guy no doubt ,but at end the end of the day if there’s no money in the pot it’s not going make any difference .Be interesting to see what he has to say about is new position .From what I’ve read he has experience for the role but unless he has a magic wand don’t see the point .Or is he there to pick up a monthly wage. We’ll have to wait and see.

  7. Like Starmer, the fanfare at Swindon went down like a wet rag, apparently.
    What was Jarvis supposed to say? He stayed for an hour then bolted.
    No sign of the person who is allegedly the PM either.

  8. Oh Joy, Starmers Loyalist YES MAN.

    We know what happens when surrounded by Yes’s, people die and things get worse.

  9. So Carns said:

    “ says the UK’s next war will not be won by the armed forces alone, but by coders, drones and energy independence.
    Writing on X, Carns says “It’ll be won by the country whose 19-year-olds can code, whose factories can build drones in weeks not years, and whose grid stays on when someone tries to switch it off.”

    Wes streeting has set his stall for leadership around defence and learship..
    “failure to make the right choices on defence spending is a symptom of the indecision at the heart of the government.”
    telling the BBC that defence was his “number one priority”.
    “Growth was meant to the number one priority, is it still? Streeting writes.”
    “There’s not enough money for defence, but today the government announced £4.5 BILLION for walking and cycling,Make choices. Decide. Lead.”

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