New York’s solution to the rat race, what’s brewing at Jing Studio, Japan’s Fast Retailing and stories you might have missed.
Friday 10/7/26
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Good morning from Midori House. For more news and views, tune in to Monocle Radio. Here’s what’s coming up in today’s Monocle Minute:

THE OPINION: Can Count Binface take out the trash? 
URBANISM: New York’s solution to the rat race 
DAILY TREAT: See what’s brewing at Jing Studio, Singapore 
RETAIL: The rise and rise of Japan’s Fast Retailing
THE LIST: Three stories that you might have missed


The Opinion: politics

Britain’s curious relationship with novelty candidates, from Screaming Lord Sutch to Count Binface

By Andrew Mueller
By Andrew Mueller

In an episode of the beloved BBC comedy Blackadder, the eponymous character connives to get his idiot sidekick Baldrick elected to parliament. Among Baldrick’s rivals for the seat of Dunny-on-the-Wold is an oppressively jovial figure identified as Ivor Biggun, representing the Standing At The Back Dressed Stupidly And Looking Stupid Party. The gag might have bewildered non-British viewers: it was a weary commentary on the phenomenon of the novelty candidate, a perennial pestilence upon UK politics. In coming weeks, the world will learn more than it wants or needs to about one such character. 

Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK – the party presently topping British polls – announced this week, in his usual tones of petulant self-pity, that he would resign his seat of Clacton to run for it again via a by-election, apparently hoping to deflect attention from his unorthodox finances. 
 
Every other major party has correctly declined to participate in the circus. As things stand, Farage’s main rivals include Laurence Fox – an actor who leads the Reclaim Party and would otherwise only appear in a seaside town such as Clacton while playing the hind legs of a pantomime horse in an end-of-the-pier production of Dick Whittington – and a man with a bin on his head. 

 
Talking trash: Count Binface is prepared to take on Farage

Count Binface – the creation of comedian Jonathan Harvey – is the most prominent current heir to Britain’s wretched tradition of novelty candidates. If we’re looking for someone to blame, we might choose Bill Boaks – a Second World War naval officer who was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross at Dunkirk, then from the 1950s onwards made a nuisance of himself in 28 elections and by-elections. Boaks was morbidly obsessed with road safety and campaigned on a self-built armoured bicycle; other stunts included stopping his placard-bedecked car in the middle of motorways.
 
Boaks’s tactics were noted by David Sutch, a hapless rock singer who reinvented himself as Screaming Lord Sutch and founded the Official Monster Raving Loony Party (OMRLP) in 1982. Its subsequent escapades have done nothing to disprove the ironclad law that anybody who advertises themselves as “loony” (see also “zany”, “kooky”, “barmy”, “madcap” or “mental”) is an excruciating bore. The OMRLP is still plodding obstinately along, doubtless greatly delighting the sort of person whose office wall bears a sign saying, “You don’t have to be crazy to work here – but it helps!” 
 
The OMRLP also intends to field a candidate in Clacton, possibly their current leader, Howling Laud Hope, who – like Count Binface – contested the recent Makerfield by-election that returned presumptive prime minister Andy Burnham to parliament (Hope polled 45 votes; Binface 95). Burnham also found himself obliged to accept the congratulations of another candidate in a fox costume: a few weeks earlier, the same person, wildlife campaigner Rob Pownall, ran for Scotland’s parliament dressed as a gannet.
 
There is obviously nothing wrong with making jokes about politics. But Binface and other novelty candidates contrive to make politics a joke. They are trivial attention-seekers, making witless japes. In so doing, they reinforce the notion that this is all a lark and that none of it really matters. Any such debasement of discourse only abets cynical populists like Nigel Farage, who profit from citizens internalising the idea that politics is unserious.
 
In the peculiar case of Clacton – a party leader running against a slate entirely composed of novelty candidates – voters have the opportunity to exact a splendid vengeance upon these pests. Electing Binface and burdening him with the responsibilities of being an MP would be an instructive cold shower. It might even work out. In 2002, the people of Hartlepool elected the mascot of local football team Hartlepool United, H’Angus The Monkey, as their mayor. The 28-year-old call centre operative inside the ape suit, Stuart Drummond, turned out to be a pretty good leader: Hartlepool re-elected him twice more. 
 
Mueller is a Monocle contributing editor and the host of Monocle Radio’s ‘The Foreign Desk’. For more opinion, analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle today.


 

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The Briefings

Urbanism: New York

New York rats begone! The Empire Bin strikes back

First there was Empire State of Mind, now there are Empire Bins (writes Ed Stocker). New York has historically relied on loose trash bags piled up on pavements to manage waste, causing serious rat issues. City leaders have long talked about cleaning up their act, declaring a Trash Revolution in 2025 under former mayor Eric Adams.

In a bid to keep plastic bags off of pavements, incumbent Zohran Mamdani has sought to scale the initiative with the introduction of 66,000 Empire Bins – large, stationary waste containers – by 2032. But the push for cleaner streets is not without controversy: some 30,000 parking spots will reportedly have to make way for the bins, with Upper Manhattan – and rats – set to be the hardest hit.


retail: japan

High-profile designers are helping to fuel the rise of Japan’s Fast Retailing

The dynamics of mainstream fashion are being shaken up (writes Natalie Theodosi). Japan’s Fast Retailing group has already pipped Gap in the US and is set to overtake Europe’s H&M Group to become the second-largest apparel retailer in the world, just behind Zara-owner Inditex. According to Nikkei, the group (which owns brands such as Uniqlo, Theory and Comptoir des Cotonniers) has raised its 2026 forecasts after a strong third quarter, with revenues jumping 22.2 per cent to ¥1bn (€5.4bn) in the past four months. Operating profits are up 46 per cent.

 
Top of the shops: Fast Retailing is on the up

Fast Retailing’s commitment to textile innovation ensures the business stands apart. But more recently it has been doubling down on talent acquisition. Uniqlo, in particular, has secured high-profile collaborations with designers from the luxury world, including Denmark’s Cecilie Bahnsen and Marni veteran Francesco Risso, as well as an ongoing line designed with Dior’s Jonathan Anderson. Beyond collaborations, the business has also locked in long-term contracts with the likes of Clare Waight Keller, who joined as creative director almost two years ago following stints at Chloé and Givenchy. Its focus on utilitarian, trend-free designs is also helping the business build loyalty among customers and, unlike most of its competitors, attract repeat purchases. While the business remains wary of the weak yen and increased temperatures, which could lead to a dip in winter-clothes sales, Fast Retailing is set to finish the year on a high and challenge some of the industry’s long-established giants. 


• • • • • DAILY TREAT • • • • •

See what’s brewing at Jing Studio, Singapore

Jing Studio teahouse has just opened beneath the sweeping tiled roof of the House of Tan Yeok Nee, the last of Singapore’s four grand Chinese-style Teochew mansions. Designed by Studio Ryecroft as a calming space in which to pause for a brew, the atelier is part of the wider restoration of the house originally built in the 1880s by the southern Chinese tycoon who lends it his name.

Tea master William Chee takes a relaxed approach to tastings, offering a menu that spans China, Taiwan and South Africa. The Phoenix Spring oolong and Coco Pulut pu’erh – a dark tea with creamy coconut notes – are favourites.
barkap.sg


 

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Beyond the headlines

the LIST: FROM monocle.com

Stories you might have missed

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