CONSERVATIVE
New Forest East

TREASURY – DEFENCE SPENDING - 18 March 2026

TREASURY – DEFENCE SPENDING - 18 March 2026

Sir Julian Lewis: I like the Minister very much, not least because he represents the Welsh seat of my birth and upbringing, and because I have such respect for him, I am going to try to make the point to him that I have so far made with zero success to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, among others. It is all well and good to talk about the greatest increase in spending on defence since the end of the cold war if we are comparing the post cold war period with what is – shall we say? – a quiet defence period, but we are not. What we need to spend now is not to be compared with what it was like after the end of the cold war, but what it was like during the cold war, and during the cold war we regularly spent between 4.5% and 5% of GDP on defence. If he recognises that there is some merit in that argument, could he try to persuade his colleagues to stop making that false comparison?

[The Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury (Torsten Bell): I thank the right hon. Member for his kind remarks, even if they were driven by geography rather than personality. I will take what I can get in today’s debate! Since we are being kind to each other, I recognise the point he makes about the significant uncertainty we face in this world today. That uncertainty always existed to a significant extent, if we are honest, and I think most Conservative Members realise that defence cuts year after year in the last decade were a mistake –]

Sir Julian Lewis: indicated assent.

[Torsten Bell: The right hon. Member is nodding. So I would offer that by way of comparison.]