Laura Kuenssberg and Robert Peston join journalists in boycotting Downing Street Brexit briefing

Boris Johnson delivers his Unleashing Britain's Potential speech. Photograph: Frank Augstein/PA Wire.

Reporters have boycotted a briefing on Boris Johnson’s Brexit plans after Downing Street ordered senior journalists from some of the UK’s major news organisations to leave.

Email this article to a friend To send a link to this page you must be logged in.

Become a Supporter Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only continue to grow with your support.

Selected journalists were invited to Number 10 for a briefing from officials but correspondents from organisations who were not on Downing Street's hand-picked list also tried to get in.

According to those present, when political correspondents arrived inside Number 10, they were asked their names and told to stand on opposite sides of the entrance hall - either side of a rug.

The Independent's political editor Andy Woodcock said Number 10's director of communications Lee Cain then invited those on one side to enter and told those on the other to leave.

When his actions were questioned he told reporters: "We are welcome to brief whoever we want whenever we want."

The journalists excluded included outlets viewed as left-wing or critical of the government but the briefing was due to involve senior civil servants - who are politically impartial.

In protest at the treatment of colleagues from rival organisations, all the journalists present chose to walk out rather than receive the briefing.

MORE: PM denies banning word 'Brexit' - but says it's over so word is not needed

MORE: Dominic Cummings reportedly sets up 'spy network' to stop Downing Street leaks

The Guardian's deputy political editor Rowena Mason said that among those who refused the briefing and walked out were the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg, ITV's Robert Peston and journalists from the Daily Mail, Telegraph, the Sun, Financial Times and Guardian.

The Daily Mirror's political editor Pippa Crerar said: "I felt deeply uncomfortable being left to stand on one side of the room while colleagues' names were read out one-by-one and they joined the group who were deemed 'acceptable' by No 10. Sinister and sad."

A Number 10 source said the prime minister's Europe adviser David Frost was due to speak to "senior, specialist members of the lobby" - a so-called "inner lobby".

The source added: "We reserve the right to brief journalists which we choose whenever we wish to, and that is not something abnormal."

They said around eight or nine organisations from "across the political spectrum" were invited to the briefing, including the BBC, Sky, Guardian, ITV, The Sun, The Daily Mail and The Times. They insisted left-leaning publications had been invited in the past, so it was "nonsense" to suggest any were excluded on political grounds.

"No one is banned - people are invited for an additional briefing, so that sort of language in itself is wrong."

Shadow culture secretary Tracy Brabin said it was a leaf out of the Trump playbook.

She said: "Press freedom is a cornerstone of our democracy and journalists must be able to hold the Government to account.

"It is concerning that Boris Johnson seems to be resorting to tactics imported from Donald Trump to hide from scrutiny."

Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary of the National Union of Journalists, said it was a "very alarming incident".

She said: "As ministers are now regularly refusing to be accountable for their actions by boycotting certain programmes and journalists, this represents another very dangerous step.

"Johnson's government must stop this paranoia and engage with all the press, not just their favourites."