Kneecap Responds to Scottish First Minister After Festival Spot Removal

Irish rap trio Kneecap hit back at Scotland's First Minister for being pulled from a festival lineup. The band defended their message of inclusion and love during a gig in Glasgow.

Jul 9, 2025 - 19:03
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Kneecap Responds to Scottish First Minister After Festival Spot Removal

Kneecap hit back at Scotland's First Minister on Tuesday night as the Irish rap trio performed a gig in Glasgow. The group was set to play the TRNSMT festival in the city this weekend, but their spot was axed following concerns raised by police. John Swinney had also called for the festival to dump the band, describing their appearance as 'unacceptable' given comments that he said were 'beyond the pale'.

Liam Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the name Mo Chara, addressed the comments 10 minutes into the gig at Glasgow's O2 Academy. He asked the crowd: 'What's your First Minister's name?' before swearing and adding: 'They stopped us playing TRNSMT but they can't stop us playing Glasgow.'

The band said the row around their axing from the festival had suggested their shows were 'hate-fests' but said they were about inclusion and love. Chara was subsequently charged with a terrorist offence but has been released under unconditional bail. Ahead of TRNSMT, Police Scotland had warned their appearance could require a large police presence.

The band, which also consists of DJ Provai ad Moglai Bap, said they did not believe their axing from TRSNMT was the festival's fault. During their Glasgow show, they also led chants against Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who had called for the group to be axed from festivals in England.

Pro-Palestine protesters also gathered outside of the festival and spoke in support of Kneecap. The band welcomed the activists, writing on social media: 'Some scenes outside the venue for tonight's gig in Glasgow. Buzzing to play one of our favourite cities for a show that sold out in seconds.'

Mo Chara led critiques against Israel but said they were aimed at 'the government, not the people'. The biggest reaction of the night came after Mo Chara said the UK Government had 'done nothing for Ireland and nothing for Glasgow'. Police say a woman was arrested for failing to leave a licensed premises and a man and woman were arrested for breach of the peace.

The band had previously attracted controversy after a clip that emerged from a gig in 2023 appeared to show a member saying: 'The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP.' Kneecap apologised to Katie Amess, the daughter of Tory MP Sir David Amess who was murdered in 2021, as well as the family of Jo Cox, the Labour MP who was murdered in 2016.

They claim the controversies are part of a smear campaign against them because of their vocal support for Palestine and criticism of Israel's actions in Gaza, which they say is a genocide.

According to the source: The Irish Independent.

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