Dutch broadcasters: Eurovision’s apolitical nature jeopardized by Israel’s participation
Dutch public broadcasters AVROTROS and NPO have called for talks with the Eurovision Song Contest organizers about Israel’s participation and the contest’s claim to being an apolitical event. They want to raise the issue with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which organizes Eurovision, together with other participating countries.
In a joint statement, AVROTROS and NPO said they “strongly value the apolitical and unifying nature of the Eurovision Song Contest.” However, they acknowledged that “the event is increasingly influenced by societal and geopolitical tensions.” The broadcasters emphasized that Israel’s involvement “raises the question of whether Eurovision still truly functions as an apolitical, unifying, and cultural event.”
The debate intensified after Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez urged the exclusion of Israel from the contest due to the ongoing war in Gaza. Sánchez drew a parallel with Russia, which has been banned from Eurovision since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The controversy also extends to the voting process. Spain’s public broadcaster RTVE requested an investigation into the televoting results after Israel received an unusually high number of public votes — 297 in total. Viewers from thirteen countries, including the Netherlands and Spain, awarded Israel the maximum twelve points. Before the televoting, Israel was ranked 14th with 60 jury points. The televoting results propelled Israel to second place, just behind winner Austria.
In response, the EBU defended its voting system as “the most advanced in the world.” The organization said the results from each country are carefully scrutinized and verified by “a large team of people to exclude suspicious or irregular voting patterns.” The EBU also noted that individuals are permitted to cast up to twenty votes in total.
