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What the haters get wrong about Israel’s Eurovision vote

They think they’re the majority. They’re not.

May 19, 2025 12:51
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BASEL, SWITZERLAND - MAY 17: Yuval Raphael representing Israel performs on stage during the Grand Final of the 69th Eurovision Song Contest Opening Ceremony at St. Jakobshalle on May 17, 2025 in Basel, Switzerland. (Photo by Harold Cunningham/Getty Images)
2 min read

If you’re after some harmless fun, here’s an idea. Have a scroll through social media and enjoy the posts about Saturday’s Eurovision Song Contest from the assorted brigades of Jew haters and anti-Israel types. Watching their total inability to come to terms with the audience vote across Europe, which put Israel top, is something to behold.

One theme is well represented: that the only way the Jews could have won public support is by being Jewy and using nefarious methods – specifically, their vast amounts of money. “There is no way Israel had the Europe popular vote, but it's a dog that pays well.” “Israel payed [sic] for people to vote for them and not for the UK.” “Israel doing phone card and credit card farming to vote up to and over a hundred times a person.”

So angry was the Spanish state broadcaster RTVE, which broadcast pro-Palestinian statements during the competition, that Israel had not been barred that it has now reportedly demanded an audit of the country’s audience votes after Israel came second in its national vote.

But one of my favourite posts posits a brilliant theory as to why Israel topped the poll: “Isn’t it obvious? The weirdos supporting the no-country will vote for Israel, but since there’s no ‘anti-Israel’ option, the votes get dispersed among all the other countries.” If you’re struggling to cope with the idea that most people not only didn’t want to see Israel barred from the competition, they wanted to see it win, it’s a kind of genius explanation as to why what happened didn’t really happen. The organisers had better remember next year to add ‘anti-Israel’ as a 38th country to the voting options.