Wireless Festival Is Canceled. The UK Banned Ye. Here’s How It Unraveled

The UK Home Office denied Ye entry on public good grounds, forcing Wireless Festival to cancel. Here's the full timeline of how the booking collapsed in under a week.

April 7, 2026
Kanye

What began as a controversial booking became a full government intervention in less than a week. London’s Wireless Festival has been canceled after the UK Home Office denied Ye’s application to enter the country, ruling that his presence would not be “conducive to the public good.” Festival Republic, the Live Nation subsidiary that organizes the event, confirmed the cancellation on Tuesday (April 7), stating that refunds would be issued to all ticket holders. The festival, scheduled for July 10 to 12 at Finsbury Park, had sold out its presale just hours earlier.

“The Home Office has withdrawn YE’s ETA, denying him entry into the United Kingdom,” Festival Republic’s statement read. “As a result, Wireless Festival is cancelled and refunds will be issued to all ticket holders.”

The collapse was swift but not surprising. When Ye was announced as the sole headliner for all three nights of the festival last week, the backlash was immediate and came from every direction at once. Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the booking “deeply concerning” in view of Ye’s history of antisemitic remarks and embrace of Nazi ideology. London Mayor Sadiq Khan distanced City Hall from the decision. The Jewish Leadership Council issued a public condemnation. And by Sunday, sponsors had already started walking: Pepsi pulled its 11-year title sponsorship, followed by Diageo and Rockstar Energy, leaving the festival’s remaining partners, including PayPal and Budweiser, under mounting pressure.

Festival Republic Managing Director Melvin Benn had defended the booking as recently as Monday, calling for “forgiveness” and arguing that giving people a second chance was “a lost virtue.” Ye himself issued a statement hours before the ban was confirmed, offering to meet with members of the UK Jewish community. “My only goal is to come to London and present a show of change, bringing unity, peace, and love through my music,” he wrote. “I know words aren’t enough. I’ll have to show change through my actions. If you’re open, I’m here.”

It was too late. The Home Office moved anyway.

Prime Minister Starmer responded to the decision with a post on X: “Kanye West should never have been invited to headline Wireless. This government stands firmly with the Jewish community, and we will not stop in our fight to confront and defeat the poison of antisemitism. We will always take the action necessary to protect the public and uphold our values.”

The Board of Deputies of British Jews welcomed the cancellation but used the moment to make a broader industry point. “Music festivals should be places where all communities feel welcome, not venues that platform individuals with records of profiteering from antisemitism, racism, and other repulsive views,” said President Phil Rosenberg. “It should not be for the Jewish community alone to advocate for our safety; it is incumbent on the entire arts and cultural sector, and civil society as a whole, to recognise the scourge of antisemitism.”

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The Community Security Trust called the outcome “sensible,” but noted that genuine rehabilitation requires a process that comes before public performance, not alongside it.

The ban echoes a pattern. Australia revoked Ye’s visa in July 2025 following the release of his song “Heil Hitler.” Tyler, the Creator was banned from the UK in 2015 over lyrics from earlier projects. The UK government has broad discretion to deny entry to foreign nationals whose presence is deemed not conducive to the public good, and it has now applied that standard to one of the most commercially powerful artists in the world.

The corporate fallout also mirrors 2022, when Adidas, CAA, and others severed ties with Ye following his first wave of antisemitic statements. The difference this time is that the withdrawal came faster, the political response reached the level of the Prime Minister, and the consequences were total: not a rebooking, not a replacement headliner, but a full cancellation of one of the UK’s most established summer festivals.

Ye still has European tour dates scheduled this summer in Turkey, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. In January, he published a full-page apology in the Wall Street Journal, attributing his behavior to a bipolar I diagnosis and a four-month manic episode. Whether those remaining dates hold, and how other governments respond, is now the next open question.

 

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