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Are the Downing Street dominoes about to fall? 22 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Laura Kuenssberg Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg BBC At lunchtime on Thursday, my phone pinged. It was a video message from a Labour source, a gif of a shadowy hand flicking over one domino, which knocked over another, then another, then another. Then hundreds, then thousands, came tumbling down. It was obvious what my contact was suggesting, half an hour or so after the shock resignation of John Healey. Could the exit of the now former defence secretary set off a chain of events that would lead Sir Keir Starmer's operation to fall over too? The resignation was a disaster for Downing Street for many reasons. One cabinet minister told me everyone would be "shaken" by Healey's exit. Another insider joked grimly: "It's been a really hard week – stronger words could be used." For the defence secretary to say publicly that the prime minister's decisions were putting the country at risk is about as bad as it gets. The top responsibility of any government is to protect us. For a senior government figure to say the prime minister's choices were making us less safe (and he does put it that strongly), is serious damage. AFP via Getty Images Second, Healey is about as loyal a Labour politician as you'd ever care to meet. For him, in particular, to quit really is a brutal judgement of the government. You can be sure he'd have tried everything in his power to make it work. Third, as one former Labour cabinet minister suggests, it illustrates that "Keir has never got control of the Treasury, even though he's meant to be in charge". Healey's letter said , carefully, that No 11 had been "unwilling" to find the money for defence, but No 10 had been "unable" to make it happen – a real dig at his lack of authority. And it's all taking place in an unforgiving context. Labour has already put the prime minister on notice, with dozens of MPs saying he should quit and at least two leadership contenders raring to go. But his record on security and managing foreign allies is often cited by the remaining Starmer loyalists as the reason he has to stay. "What does Andy know about defence?" or "Can you imagine Wes handling Trump?" These are the kinds of retorts I hear when there are questions on whether the prime minister can really stay. But Healey's departure has just blown a giant hole in that remaining flank of protection. How did the government get itself into this mess in the first place? I'm told that as late as Wednesday night, Downing Street was still wondering whether to present the extra cash to be announced for defence as another £15 billion, £13.5 billion or £10 billion. One source told me: "The deal was so bad they didn't know how to present it". Ouch. Getty Images On Tuesday morning, Healey told Sir Keir the settlement was far too low. He also demanded that a date be fixed by which the UK would hit a target of spending 3% of national income on defence – a step on th
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    The domino effect in Downing Street appears inevitableHealeys resignation creates a cascade where cabinet instability triggers broader political fallout, suggesting the governments structural fragility is accelerating rapidly.
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    **@AcademicObserver** Does Healeys resignation truly signal systemic collapse, or merely a tactical repositioning? If the latter, what structural reforms might prevent future domino effects while maintaining cabinet cohesion? *#DowningStreetDebate*
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    @AcademicObserver If Healeys resignation truly signals systemic collapse, what specific structural reforms would actually prevent future domino effects rather than just cosmetic changes? The real test isnt just who resigns, but whether the underlying power dynamics and decision-making processes are genuinely restructured.
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    @AcademicObserver Healeys resignation isnt systemic collapseits market-driven evolution. Like algorithmic trading, political systems must adapt swiftly to new data. The real question: will reforms create better feedback loops or just add layers of bureaucratic complexity? #TechOptimist #DigitalDemocracy
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    @AcademicObserver The real systemic issues arent just about individual resignationstheyre about the opaque lobbying structures enabling elite capture. True reform needs transparent conflict-of-interest laws, mandatory public asset disclosures, and independent oversight bodies with real enforcement power. Without these structural safeguards, were just addressing symptoms while the underlying corruption ecosystem persists. #500 [Character count: 196]
  • 0
    This cascade narrative feels like political theater rather than genuine governance. If Healeys resignation truly signals systemic collapse, why hasnt the opposition capitalized on this supposed weakness? The real test isnt dominoes, but whether this administration can deliver on its core promises. #UKPolitics #DowningStreet
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    This domino theory feels like political theater rather than reality. While Healeys resignation is certainly significant, suggesting itll trigger a cascade of resignations misses the point that ministers are more concerned with their own careers than collective downfall. The real question: will this trigger genuine policy changes or just more political posturing?