Who is Count Binface? Real name, other job and wife and kids | Politics | News

Count Binface poses for photographers before the Makerfield by-election result (Image: AP Photo/Jon Super)
Count Binface is Britainโs most persistent intergalactic space warrior and a beloved fixture of UK elections โ a man in a bin-shaped helmet who turns serious politics into performance art. Behind the glowing visor and silver cape is Jonathan David Harvey (often called Jon Harvey), a comedian, writer, and producer in his 50s from Croydon.
Mr Harvey has credits on sharp satirical shows like The Thick of It, Have I Got News for You, and Time Trumpet. Heโs also authored books and worked as a stand-up and broadcaster. His day job fuels the absurdity: politics as comedy, with manifestos full of pledges like price-capping croissants at ยฃ1.10, national service for ex-PMs, building โat least one affordable house,โ and representing the UK at Eurovision.

Nigel Farage pictured campaigning in his constituency on Wednesday (Image: Getty)
Family Life
On the personal side, Mr Harvey is married to or partnered with Ms. Sarah Daykin (often tagged on social media as @sarah_daykin).
They have children, including a daughter named Penelope (born around the New Year under a supermoon, with Mr Harvey joking about her โfurry backโ and were-baby status) and a son who carries his late brotherโs middle name, Daniel.
Mr Harvey has written movingly about grief after losing his older brother, Dan, unexpectedly at age 43 in 2015, using humour, sport, and family as ways to cope.

Count Binface next to Andy Burnham in Makerfield (Image: AP Photo/Jon Super)
From Lord Buckethead to Count Binface
Binfaceโs origin story involves a copyright drama that itself sounds like a sci-fi parody. Mr Harvey first gained fame in 2017 standing as Lord Buckethead against Mrs Theresa May in Maidenhead.
The character originated in Todd Durhamโs obscure 1984 low-budget film Hyperspace (a Star Wars spoof). After Mrs May was re-elected, Mr Durham โ the American creator โ asserted ownership rights and issued a complaint.
Mr Harvey rebranded as Count Binface (a โpromotion,โ he quipped), an independent โRecyclonโ space warrior from planet Sigma IX, over 5,900 years old, leader of his people.
The row spawned a rival โLord Bucketheadโ (played by someone else, sometimes tied to the Monster Raving Loony Party), leading to awkward hustings clashes, like in Boris Johnsonโs Uxbridge seat in 2019 where Binface mocked the โfakeโ version.
Mr Harvey has leaned into the absurdity, turning legal friction into enduring satire.

Jon Harvey, the real life Count Binface (Image: Instagram)
Election History and By-Election Context
Binface has contested numerous races: London mayoral elections (notably picking up over 24,000 votes in 2024), against Mr. Johnson (2019), Mr. Rishi Sunak (2024 general election, where he got 308 votes โ his best national showing), and various by-elections including Makerfield in 2026.
Heโs now eyeing the 2026 Clacton by-election, triggered by Mr. Nigel Farageโs resignation and plan to re-stand.
With major parties (Labour, Tories, Lib Dems, Greens) opting out โ calling it a โfakeโ or stunt poll amid scrutiny over Mr. Farageโs finances โ Binface has emerged as the headline challenger.
Heโs positioning as a โunity candidate,โ rallying for nominations and joking about Mr. Farageโs โcunning stunt.โ
Betting odds have hovered around 5/1 to 7/1 for an upset; some see anti-Farage tactical voting boosting him, though victory remains unlikely. He frames it as defending British democracyโs quirky spirit.
This fits a long UK tradition of eccentric candidates (Monster Raving Loony Party, etc.) that highlight democracyโs tolerance for the ridiculous.
Binface doesnโt expect to win but aims to entertain, humanise politics, and score points on issues like housing and sewage. Heโs appeared on TV (Industry series 4) and draws crowds at counts, often stealing the show from serious politicians.
In an era of polarised politics, Count Binface (or rather Mr. Jon Harvey sweating in the suit) reminds voters that elections can be fun, absurd, and โ helmet or not โ a celebration of participation.
Whether in Clacton or elsewhere, the bin-headed warrior keeps showing up, cape flowing, policies punning, proving one person (or Recyclon) can still make Westminster weirder.
