New York Times investigation claims Israel ran Eurovision soft power campaign

A New York Times investigation has found that the Israeli government conducted a well-organised campaign to use the Eurovision Song Contest as a tool for improving its international image. The report details spending of at least one million dollars on promotional efforts dating back to 2018, including 800000 dollars allocated for vote promotion in 2024 alone.

The investigation states that some funding came from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hasbara office. It notes that Israel’s contestants received popular votes from countries where the nation is unpopular, though no evidence of bots or covert methods affecting results was found. Eurovision director Martin Green has said the efforts were excessive but did not influence the outcomes in 2024 or 2025.

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Swedish singer Felicia on stage at Eurovision semifinal in Vienna, celebrating advancement to the final.
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Felicia advances to Eurovision final

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Sweden’s Felicia advanced to the Eurovision Song Contest final after performing ”My system” in the first semifinal in Vienna.

Several nations have confirmed they will skip the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest in mid-May after the European Broadcasting Union upheld Israel's eligibility despite the Gaza conflict.

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More than 1,000 artists including Brian Eno, Massive Attack and Sigur Rós have signed an open letter calling for a boycott of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026. They criticize the European Broadcasting Union for allowing Israel to compete for the third year amid its actions in Gaza. The letter demands that broadcasters, performers and fans refuse participation until Israel's broadcaster KAN is banned.

Former Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck has sharply condemned the actions of the Israeli government in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. He spoke during a live recording of the ZEIT podcast in Hamburg.

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Péter Magyar's pro-European Tisza Party secured a two-thirds majority in Hungary's parliamentary election on April 12, ending Viktor Orbán's 16-year rule. Orbán conceded defeat less than three hours after polls closed amid record turnout. Magyar vowed to restore ties with the European Union, combat corruption, and rebuild democratic checks and balances.

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