Become a Member
World

Eurovision director defends integrity of voting system in open letter

The letter comes after Austrian winner JJ expressed wish for 2026 ESC to go ahead ‘without Israel’

May 23, 2025 11:50
GettyImages-2215626544.jpg
Austrian Eurovision winner JJ has said they hope the 2026 competition can take place 'without Israel' in the wake of the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest, which saw Israel take second place. (Photo by Harold Cunningham/Getty Images)
2 min read

Eurovision Song Contest director Martin Green has released an open letter in response to voting concerns after Israel placed second in this year’s competition.

The letter, which comes just hours after Austrian Eurovision winner JJ told Spanish news outlet El Pais that he hopes the 2026 contest will go ahead “without Israel,” affirms the rigorous processes of authentication employed by the ESC voting system and contextualises the reason certain countries acquire large proportions of the public vote.

“All audience voting, be it SMS, call or online shows evidence of the motivation of communities or diasporas around certain contestants,” Green stated in his letter on Friday. “This can be for many reasons including personal attributes, back stories, geographic affiliations and current affairs. Historically the ESC has been as open to this as other singing and music competitions and reality television.”

The comment is almost certainly a nod to the results of Israel’s public vote from across Europe in this year’s contest in Basel. Israeli contestant Yuval Raphael managed to mobilise a huge proportion of international voters, placing second overall after being voted the top choice contestant by 12 countries and earning 297 points from the public vote.