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Boris Johnson to face questions after footage reveals No 10 staff joking about 'Christmas party'

Boris Johnson will face a day of difficult questions after footage emerged of Number 10 officials joking and laughing about a Christmas party in Downing Street last year during a time of strict COVID restrictions.

The prime minister is set to square off against Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs, where he could also face anger from backbenchers in his own party.

PM's 'position is untenable' after leaked 'party' video - as minister pulls out of media interviews - follow live updates

It comes after a video recording of what is reported to be a rehearsal for a TV media briefing emerged, in which senior Number 10 aides were filmed talking and laughing about a Christmas party.

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Ministerial visits scrapped as questions continue

They also jokingly referred to a "business meeting" and a "cheese and wine" event.

The footage, obtained by ITV News, is said to be from 22 December last year - four days after an alleged Christmas party took place in Number 10.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid was set to tour the broadcast studios on Wednesday morning for interviews to mark the one-year anniversary of the first COVID vaccine being administered.

But Sky News has since been told that no one from the government is available.

Speaking at an event at Chatham House, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: "I don't know the detail of what happened".

"I know that the prime minister's spokesman answered those questions in detail yesterday and I'm sure there'll be further discussion of that issue," she added.

A series of ministerial visits with media access today have also been pulled.

A Downing Street spokesperson said: "There was no Christmas party. COVID rules have been followed at all times."

'This party is not going to be investigated by the police in a year's time': Rees-Mogg jokes about No 10 party

'Boris Johnson has to resign'

Sir Keir has called on Mr Johnson to "come clean and apologise".

"People across the country followed the rules even when that meant being separated from their families, locked down and - tragically for many - unable to say goodbye to their loved ones," he said.

"They had a right to expect that the government was doing the same. To lie and to laugh about those lies is shameful."

The party's shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said Mr Johnson "has to fess up to what's gone on".

He said police should investigate, telling Kay Burley: "If there was a party, in breach of the rules, more than six people gathered, no one in our country, no one can be above the law."

The SNP's Westminster leader Ian Blackford told Sky News: "Boris Johnson has to resign."

Conservative MP Sir Roger Gale said the development was "like something out of The Thick of It" and Mr Johnson "has a certain amount of explaining to do".

Sir Roger added that it was "potentially" a "Barnard Castle moment", a reference to the PM's former chief adviser Dominic Cummings travelling out of London during the first COVID lockdown.

And he said if it transpires that Mr Johnson has misled MPs about what has gone on that "would be a resignation matter".

Conservative peer Baroness Warsi, a former minister, said every minister, parliamentarian and staffer at the alleged party "must resign now".

Tory MP Tracey Crouch told Kent Online: "I am not even going to begin to justify or defend a party in Downing Street. We all deserve a fulsome explanation and apology swiftly."