Families who lost loved ones during the pandemic have described watching the new Partygate video as a “punch in the stomach”.
Campaigners accused Tory aides filmed twirling each other around in the footage of “dancing on the graves of those who died”.
The bereaved relatives called on the Metropolitan Police to prosecute those who boozed at the lockdown-busting held in December when socialising indoors was banned in London.
The previously unseen footage, revealed by The Mirror, shows Conservative aides dancing, crashing into a buffet table, and mocking pandemic-era laws at Conservative Campaign Headquarters in central London.
The party was organised by the campaign team of the then London Mayor candidate Shaun Bailey – now Lord Bailey after Mr Johnson made him a peer in his resignation honours list. Mr Bailey had left the party before the video was taken.
Queen honoured in London New Year's fireworks before turning into King CharlesThe clip does, however, feature Ben Mallet – awarded an OBE on Mr Johnson’s list.
Mr Mallet, filmed holding a glass of red wine and wearing festive braces, was the Tories’ campaign director for the 2021 London mayoral election.
Lobby Akinnola, a spokesperson for Covid Bereaved Families For Justice (CBFFJ), lost his key worker father Femi, 60, two weeks after he caught Covid in April 2020.
The 32-year-old, from London, told the Mirror the footage is “truly disgusting”.
“There was a really serious task at hand - keeping the nation safe and saving lives. They have made a mockery of it," he said.
“Worse still, they felt emboldened and safe enough to not only do that but to film it and create evidence.
"I can’t stress enough - going into that Christmas the UK was in crisis, we were approaching the highest death rate in the world.
“What are you even celebrating? What is there to be celebrating?”
He added: “At a time when they literally held the nation’s lives in their hands they were thinking of themselves.”
Mr Akinnola also questioned what the previous police investigation into the party actually involved, and worries this will be "brushed under the carpet" as the world moves on from the pandemic.
Carol Vorderman 'scrubs up' for New Year after being branded 'queen of cougars'“How can we forget it? Our loved ones aren’t coming back. This is something we live with forever. It’s insulting,” he said.
Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group spokesman Amos Waldman, who lost his grandmother Sheila Lamb in April 2020, said he was “appalled and sickened”.
He told Times Radio: “It’s not a huge surprise given we know what was happening, but the imagery of it was pretty powerful, and completely at odds with what the rest of the country and certainly we as bereaved families were going through at the time.”
He added: “It’s like a parallel universe.
“And to be honest, it’s difficult to comprehend how they can act in such a carefree manner, given what the rest of the country was going through.
“To think of these people who were celebrating, just oblivious to what was going on around them and putting other people’s lives in danger.
“Which is, you know, one of the worst aspects of this because we all complied with the rules.”
Debbie Lewis, a campaigner from Milton Keynes who founded Covid 19 Families UK after her father Richard died, said she was more “angry than surprised” about the footage.
“Lots of my anger to be honest is that I was unable to see my father when he was in hospital as I was sticking to the rules,” she said.
“The funeral restrictions meant that there were so many people who wanted to say goodbye who were unable to.
“To find out that they held parties and danced and sang about it when we suffered so much is just horrendous, absolutely horrendous.
“It just adds to the pain we are already suffering.”
Sioux Vosper, who also lost her dad to Covid, said that watching the video on Father’s Day was “a punch in the stomach”.
“I feel upset and angry,” she said. “They partied while our loved ones died. We obeyed the rules, there were no goodbyes.”
Ms Vosper was unable to visit her father John when he was admitted to hospital. He died 18 days later in April 2020.
She demanded that Scotland Yard take action over the footage. “The people at the party need to be held accountable,” she added.
“Now the police have got video evidence, they need to be prosecuted.”
Leshie Chandrapala, whose father passed away in April 2020, said: “Whilst the country were following the rules, Tory HQ were dancing on the graves of those who died, betraying Covid bereaved and taking the nation for fools.”
Matt Forrest, whose mum Kaye died of Covid in May 2020, said watching the video “made my stomach churn”.
Mr Forrest, from Doncaster, South Yorkshire, said: “It is appalling. I could not believe what I was seeing.”
Matt Fowler, a co-founder of CBFFJ whose father, Ian, died in April 2020, told the Guardian: “It’s pretty shocking to see this especially on Father’s Day.”
“It absolutely should be investigated again, but you’ve got to wonder how much confidence to have in that investigation.
Labour's Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: “People followed the rules at great personal pain and sacrifice.
"This is what the Tory rule-breakers in Number 10 still don’t get. As far as they were concerned, it was one rule for them and another for everyone else.”
Cabinet minister Michael Gove said Lord Bailey and Mr Mallet should not be stripped of their honours, claiming: "The decision to confer honours on people was one that was made by Boris Johnson as an outgoing prime minister.
"Outgoing prime ministers have that right.
"Whether or not they should is a matter of legitimate public debate, but they do at the moment."
A Conservative Party spokesman said: "Senior CCHQ staff became aware of an unauthorised social gathering in the basement of Matthew Parker Street organised by the Bailey campaign on the evening of December 14 2020.
"Formal disciplinary action was taken against the four CCHQ staff who were seconded to the Bailey campaign."