Good Morning Britain viewers scoff at Boris Johnson after he asked “Who’s Lorraine?” At the end of his interview with Susanna Reed.
The prime minister appeared at GMB on Tuesday (May 3rd) for the first time in three years.
The last time he was on ITV’s daily newscast, Johnson seemed to be hiding in the fridge when producer Jonathan Swain approached him in Yorkshire for a television interview.
At the end of the new interview, Reed went to tell Lorraine Kelly about her daily schedule when Johnson interrupted her, saying, “Who is Lorraine?”
Reed replied, “Who is Lorraine?” Lorraine is a legend. “
Johnson seems to have misunderstood the situation, thinking he was being handed over to Kelly for another interview. “Fantastic, I didn’t think I was talking to Lorraine, okay,” he murmured.
When Kelly appeared on the screen, she simply said, “Wow. Thank you, Susanna. Master class in a political interview. ”
She went on to comment on it, saying he “did hers this morning”
Viewers who watched the interview expressed their mockery of Johnson’s blunder on social media.
“I thought it was out of touch, but it’s stratospheric out of touch,” tweeted one of the audience.
Another said: “The Downing State Cabinet:” It’s over. I think it went better than I thought. BoJo: “Who’s Lorraine?” Downing State staff: “We are. are. Fucked up. “
One viewer called it “the last line for a car accident” and another added: “A man of the people, @BorisJohnson, there … lost several million more votes on Thursday. Very good.”
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Johnson was also late for the interview in Downing Street.
The interview covers sexism in parliament, Partygate investigations and the growing cost of living crisis.
Johnson was heavily criticized for various aspects of the interview. At one point, Reed asked the prime minister what he would do to help retired Elsie, who could not afford to stay at home because heating was too expensive, so she took the bus all day instead.
Johnson’s response was proud to say that as mayor of London, he had introduced a 24-hour freedom pass that allows people over 60 to travel for free.
He also acknowledged that the financial support offered by his government was not enough to “help cover everyone” during the crisis with the cost of living in the coming months.
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