Eurovision 2026 director defends Ukraine participation amid removal calls

The director of this year's Eurovision Song Contest has pushed back against organised efforts to remove Ukraine from the competition, saying the broadcaster stands by the country's participation. The intervention, reported by Ukrainian broadcaster TSN on 6 May 2026, lands amid an intensified debate over whether nations currently involved in active armed conflict should be permitted to compete in a pan-European entertainment event.
The controversy places the European Broadcasting Union in a familiar and uncomfortable position: adjudicating between the contest's founding principles of universal access and the objections of member broadcasters who argue that wartime status creates an unseemly political subtext. Ukraine has competed in Eurovision since 2004, winning twice — most recently in 2022, the year Russia launched its full-scale invasion — and the country has made clear it regards continued participation as a matter of cultural sovereignty, not political theatre.
The director's position
Eurovision's executive supervisor, Martin Österdahl, and the contest's directorial team have consistently maintained that entries are selected on musical and production merit, not geopolitical criteria. The director's statement, as reported by TSN's coverage of the Malmö preparations, echoed that line: Ukraine qualifies as any other participating nation does, through its national selection process, and has done nothing to warrant exclusion under the contest's published rules. The EBU's charter explicitly prohibits political discrimination in participation criteria, and the organisation's public position has been that extending an invitation to Ukraine — rather than withdrawing it — reflects the contest's foundational commitment to cross-border cultural exchange.
Ukraine's national broadcaster, UA:PBC, confirmed in March that it would proceed with its national selection for 2026. The process, run without public controversy until recently, has drawn renewed scrutiny as the contest's political temperature has risen.
Competing interpretations
Those arguing for Ukraine's exclusion have framed the contest's current format as untenable. Their contention is straightforward: a country whose civilians are under daily bombardment, whose territory is partially occupied, and whose GDP is partially mobilised for defence spending occupies a different categorical position than nations at peace. To permit its participation, the argument runs, is to transform a song contest into a de facto diplomatic signal, even if no one explicitly intends that outcome.
Those resisting exclusion offer an equally direct counter-argument: the contest has never operated on a fitness-to-compete model. Nations have participated through economic crises, political upheavals, and military tensions without triggering suspension proceedings. Ukraine's musical offering — selected by a jury and public vote within Ukraine — stands on its own merits, and punishing its audience by removing the broadcast from Ukrainian homes would penalise exactly the civilian population the contest claims to serve.
The EBU has historically been reluctant to set the precedent that conflict status creates a participation test. Once that criterion is introduced, the organisation's internal logic runs, every future conflict involving a participating nation becomes a adjudication problem. The contest has no mechanism for making those determinations impartially, and no appetite, publicly at least, to develop one.
What the contest history shows
Eurovision has navigated political conflict before. Cyprus and Greece have competed through periods of regional tension; Israel's participation has been contested at various points as the conflict in Gaza has intensified. The contest admitted Russia until 2022, a decision that attracted sustained criticism long before the invasion and which the EBU reversed only under direct member pressure. The pattern that emerges from this history is not one of principled exclusion criteria but of reactive management: the EBU has typically waited until a situation became untenable for a sufficient number of member broadcasters before acting.
In 2025, Russia's entry was formally suspended after the EBU's reference group determined that the song's lyrical content — a patriotic ballad with explicit references to territorial claims — violated the contest's non-political framing rules. That decision was controversial within the European media landscape, with some broadcasters arguing it set an unworkable standard and others arguing it came too late. The 2025 precedent has complicated the question of Ukraine's participation by introducing the idea that content — rather than participation per se — might be the appropriate locus of scrutiny.
The road to Malmö
This year's contest runs from 12 to 16 May in Malmö, Sweden. The full lineup of 37 participating nations is confirmed, with the running order for the two semi-finals published last week. Ukraine performs in the second semi-final, scheduled for 14 May, with its entry determined by the national selection process completed earlier this year.
The director's public intervention is unlikely to settle the debate. Several member broadcasters have signalled continued unease, and the question of whether future editions should codify a conflict-exclusion rule is expected to surface at the EBU's post-contest review. What seems certain is that Ukraine will compete in 2026 — the question of what that participation means, and what it costs the contest in perceived neutrality, remains genuinely contested.
UA:PBC has not issued a formal statement beyond confirming participation. The EBU declined to add to the director's reported remarks when contacted for this article.
This publication covered the director's response to the exclusion calls as a matter of broadcaster governance rather than a proxy for the conflict itself — noting that the EBU's eligibility rules, not the war, govern participation, and that the question of what those rules should be in future is a legitimate governance debate rather than an implicit judgment on Ukraine's cause.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/TSN_ua/2847
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukraine_in_the_Eurovision_Song_Contest
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest_2026