Ye’s European comeback tour keeps hitting walls. Italian authorities have officially canceled both Ye’s July 18 show and Travis Scott’s July 17 appearance at the RCF Arena in Reggio Emilia, the latest chapter in a growing string of international rejections for the rapper formerly known as Kanye West.
“Reasons Of Public Order And Safety”
The RCF Arena in Reggio Emilia has a capacity of 103,000 spectators, which would have made this one of Ye’s largest arena appearances ever. Instead, Prefect Salvatore Angieri shut it down, citing “reasons of public order and safety.” The decision came after hearings involving the Jewish Community of Modena and Reggio, concerns over back-to-back show dates, crowd size, and the very real risk of counter-protests — all compounded by Ye’s own track record of cancelations abroad.
A Pattern That Has Followed Ye Across the Continent
The Italy ruling didn’t happen in a vacuum. Poland and Switzerland previously pulled the plug on planned Ye shows, with the Silesian Stadium in Chorzów citing “formal and legal reasons” for its withdrawal. Before that, the UK’s Home Office denied Ye entry on the grounds that his presence “would not be conducive to the public good,” leading to the full cancellation of the 2026 Wireless Festival in London. France similarly prevented a Marseille performance from moving forward.
What Started It All
The controversy traces back years. In 2022, a string of antisemitic social media posts got Ye’s accounts restricted on both X and Meta, and that same year Adidas ended its long-running Yeezy partnership after he wore a “White Lives Matter” shirt at Paris Fashion Week. Things escalated further when, in February 2025, Ye began selling swastika T-shirts, and in May released a song titled “Heil Hitler,” which ultimately led Australia to strip him of his visa.
An Apology That Hasn’t Been Enough
Earlier this year, Ye took out a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal, writing “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite,” and attributing his behavior to bipolar disorder and moments where he “lost touch with reality.” It hasn’t moved the needle with governments. Even British Prime Minister Keir Starmer weighed in, stating that Ye “should never have been invited” to headline a festival.
With Istanbul still on the calendar and a potential Travis Scott link-up on the horizon, Ye’s comeback is alive — just increasingly confined to the corners of the world still willing to have him.

Sorry Ye,, I didn’t know you must have taken a dumber than dirt pill which led up to those remarks. Live and learn dude….l