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San Antonio mayor calls for Kanye West July 4 concert to be cancelled

Tickets remain on sale despite the mayor's public call to cancel the July 4 show

By Sahar Zehra
San Antonio mayor calls for Kanye West July 4 concert to be cancelled
San Antonio mayor calls for Kanye West July 4 concert to be cancelled
  • San Antonio's mayor publicly called for Kanye West's July 4 concert to be cancelled
  • Tickets for the Alamodome show remain available despite the mayor's opposition
  • West has faced concert bans across the UK, France, Poland, and Australia


San Antonio Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones publicly called for Kanye West's scheduled July 4 concert to be cancelled on Saturday, just one day after tickets went on sale for the performance at the city-funded Alamodome. The mayor stated that "Military City USA should not host someone with a record of hate speech and antisemitic comments in a city-funded facility like our Alamodome — not ever, and certainly not on July 4th, our Nation's 250th birthday." Despite the mayor's opposition, tickets for the show remained available on Ticketmaster and on West's own website at the time of writing.

Growing opposition to West's tour

Jones is not the only official to speak out. The San Antonio backlash is the latest in a string of cancellations and bans that have followed West — also known as Ye — across the globe.

A planned concert in Prague collapsed earlier this month after the venue withdrew its agreement. A June performance in Poland was cancelled the previous month on what organisers described as "formal and legal reasons." Poland's Culture Minister addressed the decision directly, writing: "In a country scarred by the history of the Holocaust, we cannot pretend that this is just entertainment. Artistic freedom does not mean giving a free pass to everything. Culture cannot be a space for those who exploit it to spread hatred."

French and British bans

A French music festival was forced to postpone West's appearance after local officials vowed to block him from performing. AFP reported, citing sources close to France's interior minister, that he was exploring "all possibilities" to prevent the concert from going ahead.

Marseille Mayor Benoît Payan had already made his opposition clear on social media in late March. "I refuse to let Marseille be a showcase for those who promote hatred and unashamed Nazism," he said.

In April, the UK Home Office banned West from entering the country entirely, leading to the cancellation of his Wireless Festival headline slot. The year prior, West was denied a visa to enter Australia.

West's apology and antisemitic history

In January, Ye took out a full-page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal in an attempt to seek public forgiveness following what he described as an antisemitic rampage throughout 2025. He stated that he had suffered "a four-month-long manic episode of psychotic, paranoid and impulsive behavior that destroyed my life." During that period, West sold $20 T-shirts bearing swastikas and made repeated antisemitic statements online, including publicly declaring himself to be a Nazi.

Tampa concerts also face calls for cancellation

Two concerts West has scheduled later this month in Tampa have similarly drawn calls for cancellation. Florida Senator Rick Scott wrote to the Tampa Sports Authority Board of Directors, noting that the arena West is due to perform at is publicly owned. "Kanye West's consistent antisemitic attacks are an affront to the values of the people of the Hillsborough Community," Scott wrote in his letter. The City of Tampa Bay falls within Hillsborough County.

West's Los Angeles concerts in April proceeded without incident, though the mounting global opposition suggests future dates face far greater scrutiny.