❓WHAT HAPPENED: Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands, and Slovenia announced they will boycott the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest due to Israel’s participation.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Broadcasters from Ireland (RTE), Spain (RTVE), the Netherlands (Avrotros), and Slovenia (RTV), and Israeli President Isaac Herzog.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The boycott affects the Eurovision Song Contest in 2026, with decisions announced in late 2025.
💬KEY QUOTE: “Participation remains unconscionable given the appalling loss of lives in Gaza and the humanitarian crisis there which continues to put the lives of so many civilians at risk.” – Irish broadcaster RTE.
🎯IMPACT: The absence of these nations raises questions about the contest’s unity and the role of politics in cultural events.
Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands, and Slovenia have announced they will boycott the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest in protest of the decision to allow Israel to compete. The broadcasters cited concerns over Gaza and allegations of unfair voting practices as reasons for their withdrawal.
Spain’s public broadcaster RTVE, which led calls for Israel’s exclusion, said its board had already decided in September to pull out if Israel participated. “This withdrawal also means that RTVE will not broadcast the Eurovision 2026 final… nor the preliminary semi-finals,” the broadcaster said. RTVE added that its request for a secret ballot on Israel’s participation had been denied, a move it said “increases RTVE’s distrust of the festival’s organisation.”
Ireland’s RTE expressed similar views, stating, “Participation remains unconscionable given the appalling loss of lives in Gaza and the humanitarian crisis there which continues to put the lives of so many civilians at risk.”
Dutch broadcaster AVROTROS said participating under the current circumstances “is incompatible with the public values that are essential to us.”
Israel’s President Isaac Herzog has praised Eurovision’s decision to allow his country to compete, calling it “an appreciated gesture of solidarity, brotherhood, and cooperation, symbolising a victory over those who seek to silence Israel and spread hatred.” He added, “Israel deserves to be represented on every stage in the world, and I am fully and actively committed to that.”
The boycott comes amid a tense political backdrop between Europe and Israel. In May 2024, Ireland and Spain, along with Norway, officially recognized Palestine as an independent state, reflecting support for a two-state solution. Israeli officials have previously stated that European countries recognizing Palestine must accept Palestinian migrants, framing it as a reciprocal expectation.
Tensions have also escalated in the European Union (EU), which in September 2025 proposed sanctions against Israel over human rights concerns in Gaza and the West Bank. The measures included suspending certain trade concessions and targeting extremist government ministers and settler activities.
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