Israel’s Eurovision Campaign Went All the Way to the Top

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Government social media accounts and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu joined a drive to encourage people to vote for Israel’s entrant.

A woman in a black dress stands in an illuminated ring with her arms spread wide.
Yuval Raphael, representing Israel, during the final of the Eurovision Song Contest last Saturday in Basel, Switzerland. She came first in the public vote, but was beaten by the contestant from Austria.Credit...Harold Cunningham/Getty Images

Alex Marshall

By Alex Marshall

Alex Marshall attended the Eurovision final in Basel, Switzerland. He reported this article from London.

May 24, 2025, 12:01 a.m. ET

Just minutes before Yuval Raphael went onstage to represent Israel at the Eurovision Song Contest final last weekend, the country’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, posted an appeal to his 1.5 million Instagram followers.

“Vote #04 — New Day Will Rise” the prime minister’s post urged followers. “Vote 20 Times!” it added, a nod to the maximum number that viewers are allowed to cast under the contest’s rules.

On a day when Israel’s military began mobilizing to advance farther into Gaza, and Israeli and Hamas negotiators were engaged in cease-fire talks, it was perhaps surprising that Netanyahu was weighing in on a spectacular, high-camp pop contest.

Yet at a time when Israeli singers and artists are often shunned on the world’s stages over their country’s actions in Gaza, Eurovision appears to have grown in importance for Israel’s government.

Eurovision fans vote for a variety of reasons, but Netanyahu’s direct plea was part of a wider effort by the government and pro-Israel groups to generate support for the Israeli contestant, via social media posts, email campaigns and YouTube ads.

Israel secured the largest public vote at the final in Basel, Switzerland, and this led to a nail-biting end to the show. Israel seemed poised to win right until the last minute of the vote count, when Austria, which had performed better in points from expert juries, leaped ahead.


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