If today’s cosmic alignment leaves you feeling like Venus in retrograde—wobbly, unsure, maybe even reconsidering that bedazzled jumpsuit purchase—just know you might not be alone . Apparently, even Eurovision’s board members are leaning into their own existential crisis, with a major astrological vibe of “do we stay or do we go now?” as the glitter-drenched music competition faces one of its most dramatic showdowns ever . There’s a whiff of Libra energy in the air, tipping the scales between harmony and full-on schism . The question is as big as any Eurovision power ballad: Can a contest built on unity and sequins survive in the crosshairs of world politics? And seriously, do we need to check the stars before voting countries off the big stage next year? Because, right now, it sounds like the only thing more dramatic than a Eurovision costume change is November’s vote on Israel’s fate in the contest . Hold on to your microphones (and maybe consult your horoscope)—this is going to be anything but boring . LEARN MORE
Eurovision Song Contest organizers said Friday that member broadcasters will vote in November on whether Israel can participate in the musical extravaganza next year, as calls have mounted for the country to be excluded over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
According to spokesperson Dave Goodman, the board of the European Broadcasting Union, which brings together public broadcasters and runs the event, has sent a letter to members indicating that the vote will take place at an extraordinary general meeting held online in early November.
The vote will be on whether Kan, the Israeli public broadcaster and member of the EBU, will participate, Goodman said in an email. An “absolute majority” in the vote would be required for an exclusion to pass, he said.
Countries including Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain have threatened not to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest unless Israel is excluded from the competition over the war in Gaza.
Eurovision is a competition in which performers from countries across Europe, and a few beyond it, compete under their national flags with the aim of being crowned continental champion — a sort of Olympics of pop music.
It’s also a place where politics and regional rivalries play out.
In 2024, organizers told Israel to change the lyrics of its entry, originally titled “October Rain,” in apparent reference to Hamas’ cross-border Oct. 7, 2023, attack that killed some 1,200 Israelis and triggered the war. The song was renamed “Hurricane” and Israeli singer Eden Golan was allowed to remain in the contest.
“This is one of the biggest crises that Eurovision has ever faced because it has the potential to really cement division within the organization,” said Dean Vuletic, an expert on the history of Eurovision.
“If we have two blocs, one which is threatening a boycott and another which is remaining steadfast in its support of Israel, then this is potentially the most serious crisis that the contest has faced,” he said.
Germany and Austria have backed Israel’s participation. Other national broadcasters, including the BBC, have not yet made a decision.
Vuletic noted past exclusions of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s — due to U.N. sanctions as war in the Balkans was raging — and more recently those of Belarus in 2021 over a crackdown against media freedoms, and Russia in 2022 over its full-scale war in Ukraine.
“In both cases, we didn’t see such strong divisions within the EBU,” he said of the Belarus and Russia cases.
Kan, the Israeli broadcaster, wrote Thursday on X that it hoped the contest “will continue to uphold its cultural and non-political identity.”
Last week, Austria’s Foreign Minister Beate Meini-Reisinger expressed concerns that some countries were considering a boycott of the 2026 event in Vienna, insisting the contest was “not an instrument for sanctions.”
She wrote on X that she had written to European colleagues with an appeal to find ways to “improve the situation in Israel and Gaza” together.
The Eurovision Song Contest 2026 will take place in May in Vienna — the honor of hosting is granted to the winner of the previous year. The winner this year in Basel, Switzerland, was Austria’s JJ for the song “Wasted Love”.
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