Following The Discoveries, The Prime Minister Will Address The House Of Commons.
Boris Johnson will appear before MPs at Prime Minister's Questions later today, amid demands that he reveal whether he attended a drinks reception in the Downing Street garden when the country was under lockdown.
It will be the Prime Minister's first public appearance since it was revealed that 100 employees had been invited to the May 2020 meeting.
Mr Johnson has thus far refused to acknowledge whether or not he was present.
A number of Conservative MPs, however, have stated that this position is untenable.
People were asked to "bring your own wine" and "enjoy the great weather," according to the invitation.
The prime minister and his wife Carrie were among the about 30 people who attended the drinks, according to witnesses.
ITV reported a leaked email from Mr Johnson's principal private secretary, Martin Reynolds, on Monday, inviting colleagues to "socially distanced beverages in the No 10 garden" on May 20, 2020, when England's lockdown regulations prohibited large outdoor gatherings.
Mr Johnson has stated that it is up to Sue Gray, the senior civil servant in charge of an investigation into a series of reported parties at Downing Street and Whitehall in 2020, to figure out what happened.
However, backbencher Nigel Mills told BBC Newsnight that an investigation was not required to determine whether or not the prime minister was present.
"He knows whether or not he was present. Simply come out and admit what occurred "he stated.
Any senior official who attended the meeting, according to Mr Mills, would be "utterly untenable" if they were in charge of determining Covid-19 policy.
"I don't see how the prime minister can survive if he went to a party knowingly," he remarked.
If Mr Johnson is found to have broken Covid guidelines, Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross says he must resign.
The vice-chairman of the Conservative backbench 1922 Committee, Sir Charles Walker, said there was a lot of outrage about what had transpired, and that the prime minister needed to recover public trust immediately.
"I believe the prime minister should devote the next six months to rebuilding trust in No 10 and making some sound decisions. That, I believe, is his challenge."
After missing last week's session due to a Covid infection, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is set to return to Prime Minister's Questions today.
The prime minister is set to face questions at the dispatch box that he has so far refused to address, despite criticism from all levels of his party, including significant contributor John Caudwell.
Mr Johnson dispatched Paymaster General Michael Ellis to respond on his behalf to a Labour-introduced emergency Commons question on the subject on Tuesday.
No senior ministers went in public to defend Mr Johnson, and the Conservative benches were lightly occupied.