Boris Johnson's This Morning Interview Sparks Almost 150 Ofcom Complaints

Presenters Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield were criticised for their chat with the prime minster and for taking a selfie with him.

Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby’s This Morning interview with Boris Johnson has sparked almost 150 complaints to Ofcom. 

The TV watchdog confirmed to HuffPost UK that 149 viewers had complained about Thursday’s live interview with the prime minister, in the space of 25 hours. 

As is standard procedure, Ofcom will now assess the complaints before deciding whether or not to investigate. 

Phillip and Holly faced major criticism from viewers over their approach to the PM compared to how they conducted an interview with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn earlier in the week.

Many were also angered by the fact the presenters took a selfie with Johnson after the interview, branding it “shameful” on social media.

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Phillip Schofield, Holly Willoughby and Boris Johnson take a selfie after the PM's This Morning interview
ITV

During his interview, the prime minister outlined his vision for Brexit, and faced questioning over his previous comments about Muslims, single mothers and working class people.

However, social media users complained Holly and Phil did not press him as hard as they’d pressed Corbyn, who faced repeated questions and demands for an apology over anti-Semitism in the Labour party.

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Johnson was interviewed on the ITV daytime show on Thursday
Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock

After he and Holly began trending on Twitter, Phillip tackled the backlash, tweeting: “Can I point out that if Mr Corbyn had asked for a selfie, we would have happily obliged.”

After one user, who admitted they hadn’t actually seen the interview, criticised it for being “biased”, Phillip responded: “Perhaps it’s better to judge if you actually had watched.”

HuffPost UK has contacted ITV for comment and is awaiting a response. 

Johnson’s interview on This Morning came amid ongoing criticism over his refusal to fully commit to an interview with the BBC’s Andrew Neil, as other election candidates have done.

On Thursday evening, the broadcaster issued a challenge to Johnson to commit to the interview a powerful straight-to-camera monologue.