The World Cup Has Always been Political
The
tournament played a role in early 20th century nation building, Jonathan Wilson
says in a new book, and it is still political today.
Context
·
The
2026 World Cup buildup begins with a group
draw in Washington, attended by leaders of host nations — U.S. President
Donald Trump, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, and Canadian Prime Minister
Mark Carney.
·
FIFA
will award a new “peace prize,” expected to be given to Trump, highlighting the
political dimension of the event.
Politics & the World Cup
·
Soccer
writer Jonathan Wilson, in his book The Power and the Glory: The History
of the World Cup, argues the tournament has always been political.
·
Examples:
o
Uruguay
1930:
Nation-building and constitutional pride.
o
Italy
1934: Mussolini
used the event for fascist propaganda, inventing merchandising and grand
trophies.
o
Argentina
1978 and Brazil
1970: Military regimes leveraged the tournament for legitimacy.
Modern Dynamics
·
Gulf
states now wield major influence:
o
Qatar
2022 and Saudi
Arabia 2034 reflect FIFA’s reliance on Middle Eastern wealth.
·
Wilson
warns of caution, noting FIFA statutes often ignored when hosts breach them.
Scrutiny of Hosts
·
Every
host nation deserves scrutiny:
o
Russia
2018: labor and rights issues.
o
Brazil
2014 & South Africa 2010:
forced evictions for stadium construction.
o
U.S.
2026: concerns
about immigration barriers and hostility toward foreign fans.
Cultural & Nostalgic Reflections
·
Wilson
contrasts past tournaments (1980s–1990s) with today:
o
Earlier
World Cups felt unique, with distinct stadiums and limited access to global
players.
o
Modern
tournaments are more commodified and homogenized, though viewing figures
remain massive.
Key Takeaway
The
World Cup has always been a political stage as much as a sporting event
— from Mussolini’s propaganda in 1934 to Gulf states’ financial influence
today. The 2026 edition, hosted by the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, will continue
this tradition, raising questions about immigration, costs, and global
scrutiny, while still captivating billions worldwide.
[ABS
News Service/06.12.2025]
On
Friday, the buildup to the 2026 World Cup begins in
earnest. The
leaders of the tournament’s host countries — President Donald Trump, Mexican
President Claudia Sheinbaum and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney — are set
to appear at the Kennedy Center in Washington for a
draw to allocate the 48 participating teams into groups.
Once
that’s done, soccer pundits get a picture of the exciting matchups ahead and
fans can start planning their itineraries for what will be the biggest
tournament of its kind yet.
But
the event is about more than just the game. FIFA, the sport’s governing body,
will be awarding its own “peace prize” and Trump, who has spent
months clamoring for a Nobel recognition, is expected to receive this
newly-invented bauble. Trump is expected to tether himself to the tournament,
and like the Emir of Qatar, the 2022 host, will be on the field of the final
next July, handing out the famous trophy to the victors. The prestige he could
soak up in the moment might well obscure other concerns that loom over the
tournament, including the staggering costs of tickets in many stadiums and the
difficulties and obstacles that U.S. immigration authorities may place for
foreign fans hoping to attend.
The
World Cup has always been embedded in national and global politics, as
acclaimed soccer writer Jonathan Wilson sketches in his new book, “The Power
and the Glory: The History of the World Cup.” The tournament played a role in
early 20th century nation building, helped both buttress and undermine
autocratic governments, and always reflects the shifting politics and culture
of a globalizing world.
I
spoke to Wilson about what makes the tournament unique and his thoughts about
the months to come. Our conversation was edited for length and clarity.
What
distinguishes the World Cup from an event like the Olympics, which also draws
on countless millions of casual fans?
The
Olympics has different sports and different countries take different sports
with a different degree of seriousness. The World Cup is the one global event
where everybody is focused on the same thing. Everybody’s focused on it, and
it’s pretty much the only sport that pretty much all of the world plays and
cares about.
And
that simplicity perhaps makes it a greater vehicle for societal meaning?
When
you have the eyes of a world on you, then political actors will try to take
advantage of that. And you see that in quite grotesque ways, in terms of how
[Italian dictator Benito] Mussolini used it in ’34, the Argentinian junta used it in ’78. And it’s not just the hosts: You look
at how the Brazilian military dictatorship used it in 1970.
But
there’s even quite benign ways: Consider Uruguay 1930. Why did they want to
host it? They wanted to host it to show off, to say, “Look, we’re really good
at football. We are the best in the world at this global sport, and also we’re
playing it in the Centenario stadium” — 100 years since they signed their
[first] Constitution. It’s about a projection of Uruguay: “We’re not just a
sort of northern state of Argentina. We are important in our own right.”
After
Uruguay came fascist Italy. Can you tell us more about what the 1934 World Cup
meant for Mussolini?
Mussolini
didn’t particularly like football, like a lot of dictators. He found it too
unpredictable. He liked cars. He liked cycling. He preferred individual sports.
It’s easy to predict who’s going to win in an individual sport. But you
recognize that football had this power. And then he thought: “What’s the best
way to ensure we win it?” So they win the bid [to host
the World Cup] against Sweden, and then it suddenly becomes not just about
winning the tournament, but about putting on a great show.
And
so he essentially invents, certainly from a football
point of view, sports marketing or merchandising: That you can buy your Italy
World Cup tea tray or whatever, and it’ll be made incredibly well, by top
Italian craftsman, because he wants to show off Italy as this country that does
things properly. The tickets were printed on really high
quality paper because he wanted people to keep them as a souvenir. And
they are all branded with the fascist logo.
The Jules Rimet trophy is quite small, so he invents the
[unofficial] Copa del Duce, which is six times as
large, because he wants to be there presenting this big, glorious trophy to the
Italy captain. And sure enough, he does so, and he’s at every Italy game, and
he makes sure loads of his close allies and leading political figures are also
there.
To
fast forward to the present, we see a different status quo, with the sport
awash with money and influence from the wealthy Arab kingdoms, controlling
everything from lucrative television contracts to major European clubs. How much
of the main story now is the Gulf capture of the sport?
A
huge amount: The way that things were arranged so Saudi Arabia could host in
2034; the fact that Qatar was allowed to host in 2022 despite, I think, a huge number of reasons it shouldn’t have. But FIFA seems to
be hooked on Middle Eastern cash.
Is
that something we should gnash our teeth about or is it just part of the
natural evolution of the game?
I
think it behooves us to be cautious. I guess I’m
speaking particularly with an English hat on here, that we can’t think the game
is ours. We can’t think that it should never change. Personally, I think in an
ideal world, the World Cup would sort of alternate between an established power
and an emergent power, and that would be a good way of paying tribute to the traditions
of the game, but also of expanding the frontiers. However, you’ve got to look
at the countries you’re going to, and if they are so evidently in breach of FIFA statutes, then those FIFA statutes, by
definition, are not worth the paper they’re written on.
Would
you apply the same scrutiny to a World Cup hosted in the U. S.?
Every
World Cup host deserves scrutiny. And we saw it in Russia [in 2018] that North
Korean workers were used at certain stages. You can certainly look at [the
state of] gay rights in Russia. You look at Brazil in 2014, at the land
claiming system to build stadiums. There is a similar story in South Africa [in
2010] — people forcibly evicted from their homes. All of that deserves
scrutiny.
And
the U.S., Canada, Mexico deserve scrutiny as well. I think the obvious concern
from the point of view of the U.S. is the way it stands apart from I think
every previous World Cup. Every other World Cup host has essentially said to
most of the rest of the world, “please come to our country.” Whereas the U.S.
appears actively hostile to outsiders. And I think a lot of people feel pretty
uncomfortable just about the idea of going to the U.S.
I
am old enough now to be jaded by nostalgia. World Cups from childhood in the
1980s and 1990s seem more potent and meaningful to me, not least because back
then the World Cup was one of the main ways you could watch all the best
players in the world on television. Now, soccer is ubiquitous and there’s less
of a mystique around the players.
If
you showed me a still shot of any World Cup up to 2006 or maybe 2010 and
blurred out the players, just from color of the footage,
the look of a stadium — I could tell you which tournament it was, and I think a
lot of fans could do that. And it’s partly to do with the grain of the tape,
but it’s also to do with how stadiums looked, they had their uniqueness.
Whereas now it is very much a commodified, homogenized. Does that make it less
of an event? Viewing figures are still massive.