Kanye West's Tampa concerts face opposition from Florida Jewish organisations

West, who now performs under the name Ye, is due to appear at Raymond James Stadium on June 26 and 28

Photo: Reuters

Kanye West's planned concerts in Tampa are facing opposition from several Florida-based organisations, with community leaders calling for the events to be cancelled ahead of their scheduled dates later this month.

West, who now performs under the name Ye, is due to appear at Raymond James Stadium on June 26 and 28. However, the concerts have become the subject of criticism from the Florida Holocaust Museum, the Tampa Jewish Federation and the Florida chapter of the National Organization for Women.

The groups have joined calls from Senator Rick Scott urging venue operators to reconsider hosting the performances. The opposition centres on West's past antisemitic remarks and concerns over whether his public apology reflects a genuine change in behaviour.

Eric Stillman, president of the Florida Holocaust Museum, questioned the sincerity of the rapper's apology, stating, "To say he was sorry and to say it was based on a manic episode and not to take any actions after that, to demonstrate that this was a sincere change of heart, is really what is so hard for the members of the Jewish community in Tampa, and throughout the region and throughout the world to take that as sincere."

As part of its response to the concerts, the Florida Holocaust Museum announced plans to offer free admission on the same dates as West's performances.

The controversy comes despite West's recent commercial success. Earlier this year, he reportedly sold out two shows at SoFi Stadium and has continued to attract large audiences following the release of his latest project, Bully.

West addressed his previous antisemitic comments in an interview with The Wall Street Journal earlier this year, attributing some of his behaviour to bipolar type-1 disorder and an undiagnosed brain injury.

At present, the Tampa concerts remain scheduled to go ahead, although pressure from community organisations continues to mount ahead of the events.

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