John Prescott beaming with his wife Pauline in the last picture of him[/caption]
The married couple enjoying a day at the Brighton Race Course in 1997[/caption]
Prescott’s last event was visiting COP26 at SECC on November 10, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland[/caption]
Prescott with his boss Tony Blair[/caption]
He had been living in a care home following a stroke in 2019 and died “peacefully” surrounded by family.
The final snap, posted on his official X account, formerly Twitter, showed him happily smiling next to wife Pauline as she clutched a birthday cake.
Prescott married Pauline, 85, in 1961 and they have two children together – David and Jonathan.
The picture is understood to be celebrating Pauline’s 82nd birthday back in 2021.
In a statement announcing his death, Lord Prescott’s wife and two sons said: “We are deeply saddened to inform you that our beloved husband, father and grandfather, John Prescott, passed away peacefully yesterday at the age of 86.”
The family added: “John spent his life trying to improve the lives of others, fighting for social justice and protecting the environment.
“He did so from his time as a waiter on the cruise liners to becoming Britain’s longest serving deputy prime minister.
“John dearly loved his home of Hull and representing its people in Parliament for 40 years was his greatest honour.”
John first met future wife Pauline “Tilly” Tilston at a bus stop in 1957 when home in Chester from his trip to New Zealand.
Pauline spoke about how she fell for John after meeting him under Chester’s Eastgate Clock in her autobiography Smile Though Your Heart is Breaking.
She wrote: “A voice at my elbow startled me. ‘Hi there, it’s Pauline, isn’t it?’. I turned and found myself face-to face with a man I knew only as the ex-boyfriend of Barbara, a girl I worked with. His name was John Prescott.”
John recalled: “I went across, we chatted and I asked her if she’d like to go to the pictures.
“She said yes, so we made a date.
“We were both on the rebound, so it was fortunate timing. Can’t remember what the film was, but I know she talked all the way through it and I was a bit embarrassed.”
Pauline also revealed the former Deputy PM, then a steward on the Cunard and White Star shipping lines, was funny if not always a great romantic.
In the summer of 1959, John told her he was taking her for a meal at the Patten Arms hotel and restaurant in Warrington where he worked as a commis chef.
She knew he was going to pop the question but it was en route, in the unusual setting of a train toilet, that the secretly “shy” Prescott decided to propose rather risk embarrassment in front of an audience.
After a courtship that involved a lot of dancing at jazz clubs, the pair married in 1961, despite his brother Ray losing the rings on the day.
Former deputy prime minister Prescott kissing wife Pauline at the Labour Party conference in 2006[/caption]
John Prescott served as Deputy PM from 1997 to 2007 as a member of the Labour Party[/caption]
Prescott was nicknamed ‘two Jags’[/caption]
Prescott served as Deputy PM from 1997 to 2007 as a member of the Labour Party.
He was a key New Labour power broker who often managed the tense relationship between Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.
Paying tribute, ex-PM Blair said: “I am devastated by John’s passing. He was one of the most talented people I ever encountered in politics.”
Prescott was first elected MP for Kingston upon Hull East in 1970 – holding the seat for almost 40 years.
He first joined the shadow cabinet in 1983 with the transport brief, before quickly rising through Labour ranks.
As Deputy PM, Prescott played a big role negotiating the 1997 Kyoto climate change agreement.
And he was widely seen as a working-class tribune who ensured Labour’s union backers went along with Blair’s centrist reforms.
But he perhaps remains most famous for punching a protester who threw an egg at him during a rally in 2001.
The politician later joked about the incident quipping: “There was only one punch.
“Tony Blair rang me and he said ‘Are you OK?’ and I said ‘Yes’, and he said ‘Well, what happened?’.
“I said ‘I was just carrying out your orders. You told us to connect with the electorate, so I did’.”
And he was nicknamed “two Jags” after it emerged he had two official Jaguars.
In 2015, he was banned from driving after being caught doing 60mph in a 50mph zone in one of his beloved Jags.
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Dementia – the most common form of which is Alzheimer’s – comes on slowly over time.
As the disease progresses, symptoms can become more severe.
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The US National Institute on Aging gives some examples of what is considered normal forgetfulness in old age, and dementia disease.
You can refer to these above.
For example, it is normal for an ageing person to forget which word to use from time-to-time, but difficulting having conversation would be more indicative of dementia.
Katie Puckering, Head of Alzheimer’s Research UK’s Information Services team, previously told The Sun: “We quite commonly as humans put our car keys somewhere out of the ordinary and it takes longer for us to find them.
“As you get older, it takes longer for you to recall, or you really have to think; What was I doing? Where was I? What distracted me? Was it that I had to let the dog out? And then you find the keys by the back door.
“That process of retrieving the information is just a bit slower in people as they age.
“In dementia, someone may not be able to recall that information and what they did when they came into the house.
“What may also happen is they might put it somewhere it really doesn’t belong. For example, rather than putting the milk back in the fridge, they put the kettle in the fridge.”
After spending his MP career criticising the Lords as an “offence to democracy”, he shrugged off hypocrisy claims when appointed – saying he accepted a peerage because his wife Pauline wanted him to.
After his time as Deputy PM, Prescott took a short break from politics – before coming back to advise Tony Blair.
Prescott left the Lords this July after a stroke in 2019 stopped him attending or voting.
He was born in the Welsh seaside town of Prestatyn.
Prescott left school at 15 with no qualifications and began working life as a hotel porter back in North Wales, before becoming a commis chef and being sent by a hotel to catering college.
He was suspended for a few months after a row about the poor conditions and pay with his bosses, and after two years set his sights on something bigger.
Prescott joined the Merchant Navy in 1955 where he began as a waiter, eventually conquering his seasickness, and travelling the world.
He regularly saw famous people on his voyages, including former PM Anthony Eden shortly after he resigned in 1957, when he travelled by boat to New Zealand to “get away from everything”.
It was around this time, in 1956, that he first joined the Labour Party, aged 17, leafleting and campaigning on the doorstep around big elections.
Prescott then studied at Ruskin College in Oxford, before entering politics.
Fiery John Prescott was proud to be a blunt-speaking Northerner – he was last authentic voice of Britain’s working class
JOHN Prescott, a former Cunard Line waiter who rose to be deputy Prime Minister under Tony Blair, was the last authentic voice of the working classes to serve in high office.
The MP for Hull, known as The Mouth of The Humber, spoke for the trade unions in a New Labour government which finally broke their stranglehold over economic and industrial policy.
As deputy leader of the Labour Party, he also refereed the infamous “TeeBee-GeeBees” flare-ups between Blair and Chancellor Gordon Brown during their battle for the Labour crown.
Burly “Prezza”, a prize-winning boxer, was a bruiser both inside and outside Parliament.
In the 2001 election campaign, he was hit in the face by an egg thrown by a protestor.
Prescott, a man with a hair-trigger temper, landed a powerful left jab before police intervened.
“There was only one punch,” he explained afterwards. “Tony Blair rang and asked what happened.
“I said: ‘You told us to connect with the electorate, so I did’.”
Lord Prescott, who has died aged 86, was proud of his working-class roots and as a blunt-speaking Northerner.
But he was born in Prestatyn and regarded himself as a Welshman.
In later life he admitted carrying a chip on his shoulder after his brother Ray was rewarded with a new bike for passing his 11-plus to a grammar school.
John failed and got nothing.
What he saw as a gross injustice fuelled a lifelong resentment towards elitism – even within his own party – and an insecurity which drove him close to the top of the political greasy pole.
He was deeply hurt that in 10 years as deputy PM, he and his glamorous wife, Pauline – an Elizabeth Taylor lookalike – were never invited to dinner at Chequers, the PM’s official home.
Prescott blamed Blair’s “snobbish” wife, Cherie.
“We never got close to the Blairs,” he said. “It just didn’t happen. We were not their set. Certainly we were not her set.”
The former ship’s steward was mocked by toffee-nosed Tories such as Nicholas Soames who greeted him in the Commons, crying: “Mine’s a gin-and-tonic, Giovanni.”
And he was teased for mangling the English language, once complaining “the sceptre of unemployment stalking the north-east”.
As Environment supremo, he boasted: “The Green Belt is a Labour achievement – and we mean to build on it.”
But the son of a railway signaller was no fool.
He studied economics and politics at Ruskin College, Oxford, and scored a BSc degree at Hull University.
He enjoyed his success, living in a turreted mock-Tudor mansion and playing croquet on the lawns of his official home, Dorneywood.
An avowed socialist, he earned his “Two Jags” nickname by driving an XJ6 Jaguar and using a chauffeur-driven XJ8 for government business.
“My roots, my background, the way I act is working class, but it would by hypocritical to say I’m anything other than middle class now,” he admitted.
John Prescott’s remarkable political career crumbled dramatically in 2006 when his two-year love affair with bubbly secretary Tracey Temple was exposed after her jealous lover read her diary.
Tracey, who sold her story to a Sunday newspaper for £250,000, described “groping and kissing” in the Deputy PM’s office and his opulent grace-and-favour Admiralty office flat.
“We were very lucky we were never caught – as we never shut the door,” noted Tracey, played by Maxine Peake in “Confessions of a Diary Secretary”.
“When I went into his office for diary meetings, if I was wearing a skirt he would slide his hand up my leg, under it.
“He used to stroke my back. And, yes, I did give him sex in the office a couple of times.
“I knew what we were doing was risky but we both got carried away.
“Seven civil servants worked right outside his office. Of course there were moments when I thought, I shouldn’t be doing this.
“I also thought how surprised and shocked people would be if this ever got out.”
Prezza resigned as deputy Labour leader telling the 2006 party conference: “I know I let myself down. I let you down.
“So conference, I apologise.”
Nine years later he returned to front-line politics as unpaid adviser to Ed Miliband on climate change.
Prescott suffered a stroke while campaigning for Mr Corbyn at the 2019 election and retired from politics.