FIFA Contract Clause Could Scupper Plans for ICE at World Cup
Now, imagine what could happen to fans from the Middle East. The price for wanting to visit the US has meant having your electronics searched, your politics interrogated, or getting strip-searched and left naked in a back room at Logan Airport. But as we’ve seen recently, the treatment of people as they are entering this country has borne more resemblance to airports in Tel Aviv or Pinochet’s Chile than those in a democratic country.
US could lose 2026 World Cup hosting rights if hidden contract...
Trump then alienated many nations set to compete in the biggest international tournament with his travel ban list, attempted purchase of Greenland, and threats of tariffs against European nations. “Cancel, reschedule or relocate one or more matches (or the entire FIFA World Cup 26) for any reason at its sole discretion, including as a result of force majeure or due to health, safety or security concerns.” Preparations are already underway, with organizers establishing infrastructure and logistics in the host cities.- Eight matches will be played in Atlanta beginning in June, including five group stage matches and three from later in the tournament.
- "We will make sure we get as much heads-up as possible, so that small businesses and large businesses — and citizens — will get ample information from us about what to expect (and) how to maintain your own dignity and rights," the mayor said.
- The Netherlands, England, Germany, among other countries, may think twice about boycott plans after a little-known rule has emerged.
- Now, Canadian officials are pushing to ban ICE from local World Cup events later this year.
- ICE has increased its presence in Atlanta, and a new ICE detention center is slated for construction and operation in Social Circle, Georgia, about 45 miles east of Atlanta.
- Blatter endorsed warnings from anti-corruption experts who described the US as too dangerous for visitors amid domestic uproar and immigration crackdowns.
With ICE Out of Control, How Can the US Cohost the 2026 World Cup?
Self-interest alone should keep countries away from the United States like the plague. Starting now, we need to push international sports federations to put in writing how their politics and policies will change to ensure the safety of not only tourists, but the players, coaches, and their families. For many globe-trotting soccer fans, the chickens have now come home to roost. Some respond to this blithely by pointing out that FIFA stages the World Cup in autocratic countries all the time. Given that ICE is being used as a masked abduction force, and given “border czar” Tom Homan’s contempt for the courts, it is unconscionable to encourage people to visit this country. The task force is housed in the Department of Homeland Security, with Trump serving as the chair (and Vice President JD Vance as vice chair), presumably during his time off from running the Kennedy Center and tanking the economy. The US’s “market share” of global travel has shriveled, falling from 12.8 percent in 2015 to 9.1 percent today. And what about those from the 43 countries on Trump’s draft list of travel-banned nations?The Nation Weekly
Canadian outlet National Observer report that an agreement between FIFA and Vancouver contains a clause that requires the host city to cooperate with the host country's police and military forces to provide security. The Miami-Dade County Sheriff said two weeks ago they would not be doing immigration enforcement during the World Cup and that their only role would be focused on safety and security. "The World Cup is a global event. If FIFA does not act now, the world will remember Miami not for the game-winning goals, but for raids, fear and family separation." Questions were raised about ICE and Customs and Border Patrol agents at World Cup games earlier this month when the Club World Cup kicked off at Hard Rock Stadium. Miami is one of 16 cities across the U.S., Canada and Mexico that will be hosting the soccer World Cup in June and July of next year. "We want the games to be safe, to be welcoming, we want the games to be a point of pride to our city, not another global embarrassment," Thomas Kennedy said. People in this country do seem to be waking up to what we have become—now international sports federations need to do the same.FIFA in Focus
We want a World Cup without fear, without raids, and without violations of human rights,” Méndez stated. “Fans come to watch soccer stars, not to run into ‘Alligator Alcatraz,’” declared one spokesperson, making an ironic reference to the immigration detention center in the Everglades, which remains heavily criticized by human rights groups. No official FIFA action has been taken to alter US hosting as of early February 2026. The US hosts the majority of matches (including the final) across 11 cities, with massive economic stakes—billions in revenue for FIFA, cities, and sponsors. For them, ensuring that immigrant communities can participate without fear is not just a moral imperative—it’s a condition for the success and integrity of the tournament itself. As preparations continue for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, rights advocates are sounding the alarm. “This World Cup must not become a place of fear and detention,” said Paul Christian Namphy of Family Action Network Movement (FANM). Attorney Will Mann of the Community Justice Project warned that the 287(g) program turns local law enforcement into extensions of ICE. “These programs are causing chaos, fear, and uncertainty across our communities,” she added.- According to the 2026 World Cup rulebook, FIFA have the right to 'cancel, reschedule or relocate one or more matches (or the entire FIFA World Cup 26) for any reason at its sole discretion, including as a result of force majeure or due to health, safety or security concerns.'
- Civil rights advocates demand FIFA ban ICE from football venues in the U.S., warning that immigration enforcement is scaring away fans, harming attendance, and threatening the reputation of the 2026 World Cup.
- "We hope that their presence will be small, unnoticeable, negligible, invisible — and maybe nonexistent."
- The US’s “market share” of global travel has shriveled, falling from 12.8 percent in 2015 to 9.1 percent today.
- The activists pointed to recent reports of federal agents being present at Club World Cup matches, a situation they say has discouraged many fans — especially immigrants — from attending games.
- Starting now, we need to push international sports federations to put in writing how their politics and policies will change to ensure the safety of not only tourists, but the players, coaches, and their families.
