Overview
- Festival Republic said Tuesday that the Home Office withdrew Ye’s Electronic Travel Authorisation, blocking his entry to Britain and forcing Wireless Festival’s cancellation with full refunds.
- The Home Office cited that his presence would not be conducive to the public good, and multiple outlets reported the travel approval was first granted online before ministers intervened to reverse it.
- Major sponsors had already exited after Ye was booked for three headline nights in July at London’s Finsbury Park, with Pepsi, Diageo, Rockstar Energy and PayPal all pulling support.
- Political leaders and Jewish groups welcomed the block, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer criticising the original booking and organisations such as the Campaign Against Antisemitism and Community Security Trust calling the move the right outcome.
- Ye had apologised earlier this year in a Wall Street Journal ad and, on Tuesday, offered to meet UK Jewish community leaders, but organisers’ earlier pleas for “forgiveness and hope” could not overcome concerns over his recent Nazi imagery and antisemitic remarks.