12 comments

  • thih91 minute ago
    Novelty candidates sometimes get elected<p>&gt; Drummond immediately decided to concentrate on politics and ceased being H&#x27;Angus; he was quoted as saying, &quot;I am Stuart Drummond, I am the Mayor of Hartlepool, not the monkey.&quot; Drummond was re-elected in 2005, more than doubling his vote (up to over 16,000)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Stuart_Drummond" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Stuart_Drummond</a>
  • JumpCrisscross2 hours ago
    &quot;Harvey previously stood as a similar character, Lord Buckethead, but was forced to create a new character due to a dispute with the filmmaker Todd Durham, who owns the Buckethead character&quot; [1].<p>(The videos on this website are worth the watch. Hilarious, of course. But also...Binface conjugates Latin to <i>Sky News</i>, and not just as a bit. I don&#x27;t know how I feel about the British comedy candidate outclassing half of the American elected leadership–and a good fraction of its industrial leadership–on IQ.)<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Count_Binface" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Count_Binface</a>
    • BLKNSLVR51 minutes ago
      Excerpt from linked page:<p>&gt; <i>I came to Earth in 2017 and stood against Prime Minister Theresa May (as ‘Lord Buckethead’). Then in 2018, after an unfortunate battle on the planet Copyright, I rewspawned in my true form as Count Binface.</i>
  • BLKNSLVR2 hours ago
    I wish Count Binface all the best for the Clacton by-election.<p>Edited to add: Some of my favourite commentary around this by-election is along the lines of:<p><i>A fundamentally un-serious candidate with no coherent policies or political experience running against Count Binface.</i>
  • gib4441 minute ago
    [delayed]
  • mellosouls1 hour ago
    Related mini-discussion the other day:<p><i>Farage left fighting a trash can as the UK populist&#x27;s election gamble backfires</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=48848034">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=48848034</a>
  • wxw2 hours ago
    &gt; I’m an intergalactic space warrior and leader of the Recyclons from planet Sigma IX.<p>Ok you have my vote.
  • llimos1 hour ago
    There&#x27;s a long tradition in the UK of comedy candidates, notably the Monster Raving Loony Party.<p>There&#x27;s even some talk of a potential Loony-Bin alliance.
    • onion2k57 minutes ago
      The difference in this instance is that all of the major parties have stood aside, leaving the Clacton by-election as a race between Nigel Farage and Count Binface. Essentially it&#x27;s turned into an election between Farage and anyone-but-Farage.<p>I sincerely hope the best alien wins.
      • stavros21 minutes ago
        I don&#x27;t understand what this is, can someone explain? Clacton seems to be a town in the UK, are they campaigning for mayor? What&#x27;s the relevance, why is Farage even involved?
        • MarcScott4 minutes ago
          Very briefly:<p>Farage received a &quot;gift&quot; of £5M. He didn&#x27;t tell parliament about the gift, which breaks the rules. MPs or campaigning MPs need to declare gifts and donations, as there are strict rules on who you can receive money from. The media found out about the &quot;gift&quot;, and Farage was going to be investigated. He resigned as MP for Clacton, which stops the investigation and triggers an election. I think his plan was for him to win again, and then be able to turn around and say &quot;the people have decided, they don&#x27;t care about gifts I get.&quot; However, all the other parties refused to stand candidates in the upcoming election. If Farage wins, then the investigation will start again. However, we have numerous comedic parties that will run in elections in the UK. Count Binface will challenge Farage. Farage won with something like 46% of the vote last time. With the negative coverage he&#x27;s been receiving, and the option of sticking it to reform by voting for Count Binface, the people of Clacton might end up delivering a very embarrassing defeat for Farage. This is the country that voted to name a research vessel Boaty McBoatFace.
          • stavros2 minutes ago
            Thank you for the explanation, so this is basically for the election as MP. Does this mean that Farage&#x27;s party also can&#x27;t win in the next general election (and make him PM)? AFAIK him becoming PM was a worry.
        • clort6 minutes ago
          Farage is the current MP for Clacton. He has resigned because he is being investigated for taking massive amounts of dodgy money and not declaring it. He thinks he claimed the upper hand by saying that the voters would decide if that was ok or not, but the other parties have declined to participate. Now, it is a battle between himself and an alien being with a bin for a face.<p>Notably, if he is re-elected, the Parliamentary Standards Committee will simply continue their investigation into his dodgy finances.
          • stavros2 minutes ago
            Thanks for the context!
        • 13hours7 minutes ago
          Representatives in the UK parliament are elected to represent a constituency, mostly the size of a town. In this case the constituency of Clanton is having a by-election (special election), because the representative resigned. With reading up on why this happened.
        • ncallaway3 minutes ago
          It is a seat of parliament for the Clacton constituency (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Clacton_(constituency)" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Clacton_(constituency)</a>). If you&#x27;re American, think of it as a Congressional District, and it&#x27;s a special election.<p>Basically Nigel Farage won the seat to become a member of parliament representing the Clacton district. Then, there was an ethics scandal, so Nigel Farage resigned his seat, but is running in the special election to fill the vacancy. All the other serious political parties (Greens, Labour, Conservatives, Restore) think this is a stunt and a waste of time, so they aren&#x27;t running any candidates. So, Nigel Farage is the only &quot;real&quot; politician in the race, and the &quot;silly&quot; candidate with the most support is Count Binface. So the special election ends up being between Farage and Count Binface.
        • jdietrich5 minutes ago
          Nigel Farage is the incumbent Member of Parliament for Clacton and the de-facto leader of Reform UK, a populist right-wing party that has only a handful of MPs but is currently leading the polls. He is being investigated by the Parliamentary Standards Committee over personal donations he accepted prior to becoming an MP. In response to this investigation, Farage stood down as MP, triggering a by-election (a special election held when an MP resigns, dies or is otherwise removed from their seat mid-term).<p>Farage announced his intention to stand in this by-election (which he is entitled to do), arguing that only his constituents had the right to decide whether he was fit to be a Member of Parliament. He argues that the Standards Committee is fundamentally illegitimate because he would be judged by his political rivals; in any case, the greatest sanction the committee could impose would be his expulsion from parliament, which would trigger a by-election that he would be entitled to stand in. The other major parties have all decided not to stand candidates against Farage in the Clacton by-election, creating this slightly farcical contest between the incumbent and a joke candidate.
          • stavros0 minutes ago
            Thanks for the explanation!
        • LeoPanthera5 minutes ago
          Clacton is a town in the UK. The election was triggered by Nigel Farage, the right-wing leader of the Reform UK party, resigning his parliamentary seat in early July amid a parliamentary investigation into an allegedly undeclared £5 million financial gift.<p>Instead of waiting out the inquiry, Farage decided to immediately run for his own vacant seat again, framing the sudden election as a &quot;people versus the establishment&quot; referendum to clear his name. All Britain&#x27;s major political parties, including the governing Labour Party and the opposition Conservatives, are boycotting the race entirely.<p>Farage’s primary opponent is a man wearing a trash can on his head who goes by the name &quot;Count Binface&quot;, a &quot;beloved&quot; staple of modern British democracy who regularly runs against prime ministers and prominent politicians as a satirical protest vote, armed with policies like capping the price of croissants and mandating functioning Wi-Fi on trains.
          • stavros1 minute ago
            Thanks for the explanation, here&#x27;s hoping Binface wins then!
  • WalterGR2 hours ago
    (In the US, his name would translate as Count Trash Can-Face or Count Garbage Can-Face.)
    • JumpCrisscross2 hours ago
      &quot;Bin,&quot; generally, isn&#x27;t British English. We have recycling bins, for instance.
      • gwerbin2 hours ago
        Yes but in the USA a &quot;bin&quot; usually refers to a generic category of containers, often rectangular. A &quot;recycling bin&quot; is a specific kind of bin, and it&#x27;s almost always qualified as such. If you called it a &quot;bin&quot; out of context people would be confused or think you&#x27;re trying to be British or something.
        • georgemcbay28 minutes ago
          Yeah, I&#x27;d say it exists in a linguistic grey-zone where understanding is a lot more common than usage.<p>Practically no American ever calls a garbage can a &quot;bin&quot; (though like you say we do have a concept of generic &#x27;bins&#x27;) but a lot of Americans will immediately know what you mean if you say it, sort of like &quot;flat&quot; and &quot;apartment&quot; (nobody calls them flats in the US, but many people know what you&#x27;re talking about if you say it).
      • zabzonk1 hour ago
        &gt; isn&#x27;t British English.<p>Eh? Most commonly uttered words in UK English: &quot;Have you put the bins out?&quot;
        • titanomachy1 hour ago
          He means not <i>exclusively</i> British English
          • Lio17 minutes ago
            Then he should probably say that.<p>Almost no words are <i>exclusively</i> British English, or just English, is the original and oldest dialect of the language.
    • josemanuel2 hours ago
      Same in the UK. If you look at his pic, you’ll see it’s literal!
    • gwerbin2 hours ago
      Or in Massachusetts, Count Barrelface.
  • dyauspitr2 hours ago
    With this much memery he would probably win the presidential election in the US.
  • JammyDodgeIt1 hour ago
    [flagged]
  • blast1 hour ago
    Prior art: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Boaty_McBoatface" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Boaty_McBoatface</a>
    • Lio30 minutes ago
      Actually the prior art is Screaming Lord Sutch of the Monster Raving Looney Party[1] who started in 1963.<p>As a former Monster Raving Looney I have decided to defect to the Binface Party based on their sensible policies on the hand dryer in the Uxbridge Crown &amp; Treaty pub.<p>1. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Screaming_Lord_Sutch" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Screaming_Lord_Sutch</a>
    • rjsw34 minutes ago
      Better prior art [1], in an actual election.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Stuart_Drummond" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Stuart_Drummond</a>
    • rf151 hour ago
      Lord Buckethead is much older than Boaty McBoatface.
    • breppp1 hour ago
      I thought that&#x27;s the prior art <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;The_Waldo_Moment" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;The_Waldo_Moment</a>