LONDON, 18 August 2006 — British Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott denied yesterday a front-page report in a major newspaper that he had called US President George Bush “crap” and “a cowboy.”
Labour MP Harry Cohen was quoted in The Independent as saying that Prescott — in charge of the government whilst Prime Minister Tony Blair is on summer holiday — made the remarks at a private meeting in London on Tuesday.
“He was talking in the context of the ‘road map’ in the Middle East,” Cohen said. “He said he only gave support to the war on Iraq because they promised the road map.” “But he said the Bush administration had been crap on that. We all laughed and he said to an official: ‘Don’t minute that’.”
Cohen added: “We also had a laugh when he said old Bush is just a cowboy with his Stetson on. But then he said: ‘I can hardly talk about that, can I?’.”
In a statement yesterday, Prescott said: “This is an inaccurate report of a private conversation and it is not my view.”
The Independent, which in its editorials regularly condemns US foreign policy, ran its report over the headline: “Bush is crap, says Prescott.”
Political analysts said that if Prescott made the remark, it would have been in character for the beefy seaman-turned-politician who was once famously filmed punching a heckler who threw an egg at him while he was campaigning.
He was stripped of most of his cabinet responsibilities in May in a furor over his extramarital affair with a government secretary, but was retained by Blair to be his second in command.
Prescott’s fling is to be the subject of a 90-minute film for Britain’s main commercial ITV channel, made by the same team that whipped up a soap opera on the love affair that cost David Blunkett his job as home secretary last year.
A script has been commissioned, with production to follow later this year and broadcast due in 2007.
Prescott also remains the subject of controversy over his contacts with a US billionaire, Philip Anschutz, who is bidding for the rights to turn the Millennium Dome in Greenwich, southeast London into a huge casino.
