Farage to stand against ‘record’ 33 candidates in UK by-election, including Count Binface


LONDON — British anti-immigrant politician Nigel Farage will stand against a “record” 33 fringe opponents including longstanding joke candidate Count Binface in a snap by-election next month in eastern England he has triggered, local officials confirmed Friday.
Tendring District Council, which will manage the contest in Clacton — a seaside town and constituency which Farage has represented in parliament since 2024 — announced he and 33 candidates will be on the ballot after nominations closed Friday.
The council said that the total of 34 candidates “is believed to be a record for a parliamentary election.”
Britain’s mainstream parties have opted to boycott the poll after Farage contentiously said he would quit as an MP earlier this month and then re-stand, in a bid to stymie a growing furore around his finances.
The leader of the Reform UK party, which has led national opinion polls for more than a year, has been dogged for weeks by mounting pressure over the non-disclosure of gifts, including allegedly from a convicted fraudster.
The boycott by other parties means his most high-profile rival in the August 13 snap vote is Binface — the so-called intergalactic space warrior and alter ego of a stand-up comedian who wears a huge rubbish bin over his head, along with armor and a gray cape.

But he will be far from the only joke candidate: Alan “Howling Laud” Hope, the leader of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party will also be standing.
The long-established eccentric party is also fielding two other candidates: deputy leader Baron Von Thunderclap and treasurer Nick the Flying Brick, who calls for the abolition of gravity.
The list also includes British actor turned “anti-woke” activist Laurence Fox and other representatives of fringe parties and independents.
Addressing a CPAC conservative political conference in London on Friday, Farage said “the people of Clacton can decide whether they back me or whether they back the Establishment.”
“I’ve taken a punt because I like a gamble,” he added. “I think they’re going to come down on my side. I hope and pray that they do. Yes, let the people decide. Let the people be my judge, not the Westminster elite.”

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