THE EUROPEAN BROADCASTING Union (EBU) has said that it will hold an vote in November to decide whether Israel will be allowed to take part in the Eurovision Song Contest next year.
The unprecedented move follows months of mounting pressure from national broadcasters, with RTÉ, Spain’s RTVE, and the Netherlands’ AVROTROS all pledging to withdraw if Israel’s state broadcaster KAN remains in the competition.
Slovenia and Iceland’s public broadcasters have also indicated they may follow suit.
In a letter sent to member broadcasters which has since been distributed on social media, EBU president Delphine Ernotte-Cunci acknowledged an “unprecedented diversity of views” over Israel’s participation, saying the issue required “a broader democratic basis”.
In a statement to The Journal, the EBU confirmed that a letter was sent from the Executive Board of the European Broadcasting Union to the directors of all members.
“[This letter] informed them that a vote on participation in the Eurovision Song Contest 2026 will take place at an extraordinary meeting of the EBU’s General Assembly to be held online in early November,” the statement read.
Israel’s public broadcaster KAN expressed hope that the Eurovision Song Contest “will continue to maintain its cultural and political character.”
The broadcaster warned that removing Israel, “one of the veteran, most popular and successful competitors,” ahead of the contest’s 70th anniversary could have “significant consequences.”
KAN also noted that EBU rules require a 75% majority of members for extraordinary decisions and said it was confident the union would safeguard the “apolitical, professional and cultural nature of the competition.”
The vote, expected in early November, will be the only item on the agenda.
Until now, membership of the EBU guaranteed broadcasters the right to participate.
A suspension would mark a historic precedent and could reshape how the contest navigates geopolitical controversies.
Russia was expelled from Eurovision in 2022 following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, but Israel has competed throughout the genocide in Gaza despite growing opposition.
Reports emerged in Israeli media earlier this month suggesting that the EBU had quietly put proposals to national broadcaster KAN giving a choice to either compete under a neutral flag or to temporarily withdraw for a year.
The EBU, however, has insisted that no such proposals have been made.