Saturday, December 13, 2025

Image: Quejaytee.
On Wednesday, Iceland withdrew from the Eurovision Song Contest 2026, joining Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland, and Slovenia. Each of the five countries backed out of the contest due to European Broadcasting Union (EBU) confirming Israel’s participation in the 2026 edition.
In the days prior, after four countries withdrew from the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest, Iceland’s broadcaster RÚV deferred its decision on participation until a board meeting on Wednesday. Following the meeting, RÚV announced it would not participate. According to the BBC, the broadcaster’s board had previously approved a recommendation to ask the EBU to ban Israel from the 2026 contest, and Iceland was among seven countries that sought a vote on Israel’s participation at the EBU’s general meeting, a request the union declined.
The broadcaster cited domestic public debate and reactions to the EBU’s recent decision on Israel’s participation, stating: “Given the public debate in this country and the reactions to the decision of the EBU that was taken last week, it is clear that neither joy nor peace will prevail regarding the participation of RÚV in Eurovision.” RÚV added that Israel’s participation “created disunity among both members of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the general public” and that “the Song Contest and Eurovision have always had the aim of uniting the Icelandic nation, but it is now clear that this aim cannot be achieved, and it is on these program-related grounds that this decision is taken.”
According to ABC News Australia and the BBC, EBU members last week approved changes to the contest’s voting rules in response to allegations that Israel manipulated the vote, but took no action to exclude any broadcaster. ABC News Australia also reported that seven countries, including Iceland, requested a vote on Israel’s participation, but the EBU declined to hold one.
The BBC also reported that Golan Yochpaz, chief executive of Israel’s public broadcaster KAN, criticized the effort to remove Israel from the contest, describing it as a “cultural boycott” and warning that “a boycott may begin today with Israel, but no one knows where it will end or who else it may harm.” He questioned whether this was how the contest should be remembered on its 70th anniversary. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar criticized the countries withdrawing from the contest, saying on X that “the disgrace is upon them.”
Also on Wednesday, Poland announced it would remain in the contest, stating that “Eurovision still has a chance to once again become a space filled with music — and only music,” and adding that “we, like the overwhelming majority of EBU members, offer this opportunity.”
ABC News Australia noted that Iceland, which has never won the contest, has the highest per-capita Eurovision viewing audience of any participating country.
- Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision Song Contest over Israel — France24, December 11, 2025
- Jennifer Shahin. Eurovision chaos intensifies as Iceland becomes fifth nation to back out of contest over Israel’s participation — Sky News, December 11, 2025
- Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision 2026 over Israeli participation — ABC News (Australia), December 11, 2025
- Mark Savage and Ian Youngs. Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision — BBC, December 10, 2025
- Allen Cone. Iceland becomes 5th nation to boycott Eurovision over Israel inclusion — UPI, December 10, 2025
- Olivia Le Poidevin, Klaus Lauer, Johnny Cotton, Cecile Mantovani. Israel cleared to stay in Eurovision; Spain, Ireland and others quit in protest — Reuters, December 5, 2025
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