Kanye West Has Been Essentially Banned from Entering the United Kingdom
The UK banned Ye (formerly Kanye West) from entering the country. Wireless festival cancelled the entire event the same day.
Wireless had booked Ye for all 3 nights at Finsbury Park in July. Festival Republic said multiple stakeholders were consulted before the booking and no concerns were raised at the time. The collapse started over the weekend when Starmer publicly criticized the decision, and sponsors including Pepsi and Diageo pulled their money.
The Home Office’s “not conducive to the public good” standard is the same mechanism the UK has used to deny entry to hate preachers and far-right figures. It requires no criminal conviction. The government decides the person’s presence itself poses a risk.
The timeline of what triggered it runs back to October 2022. Ye wore a “White Lives Matter” shirt, posted “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE,” went on InfoWars and told Alex Jones “I like Hitler” and “I’m a Nazi,” and had dinner with Donald Trump and white nationalist Nick Fuentes. Adidas terminated the Yeezy partnership. In 2025 he released a track called “Heil Hitler,” posted a swastika T-shirt for sale on his website, and performed a Nazi salute during a livestream.
In January 2026 he ran the full-page Wall Street Journal ad attributing his behavior to bipolar disorder and a frontal-lobe brain injury from a car accident roughly 25 years ago.
Phil Rosenberg, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, responded to the ban by noting that Ye’s latest album still includes a track called “Gas Chamber.” He also referenced Ye’s 2018 claim that 400 years of slavery was “like a choice.” The Board had offered to meet with Ye if he withdrew from Wireless voluntarily. He didn’t.
Melvin Benn, managing director of Festival Republic, which promotes Wireless, said Ye “intended to come in and perform” and that the festival was “not giving him a platform to extol opinion of whatever nature, only to perform.” The Home Office decided otherwise.
On Tuesday, the same day as the ban, Ye offered to “meet and listen” to members of the UK’s Jewish community.