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JD Vance’s unwelcoming warning to World Cup fans resurfaces after opening ceremony in Mexico

Photo by Matt Rourke-Pool/Getty Images
Photo by Matt Rourke-Pool/Getty Images
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The 2026 World Cup opening ceremony in Mexico City on Thursday sparked an early political talking point before a ball had even been kicked.

There were conflicting reports over whether the USA flag was booed when it was presented alongside the other competing nations. Some reporters and fans said jeers were audible, while one supporter inside the stadium told HITC the reaction was closer to indifference, with Argentina receiving the real boos.

Either way, the moment reopened a wider question about how the United States is being viewed as a host. That is why JD Vance’s previous warning to travelling supporters has resurfaced.

JD Vance warning returns amid World Cup travel debate

FBL-WC-2026-MATCH01-MEX-RSA
Photo by Rodrigo OROPEZA / AFP via Getty Images

Vance, the US vice-president, had tried to frame the tournament as a welcome event, but his message also reflected the Trump administration’s hard line on immigration.

“Of course everyone is welcome to come and see this wonderful event. We want them to come, we want them to celebrate, we want them to watch the games. But when the time is up we want them to go home, otherwise they will have to talk to Secretary Noem,” he said last week (via Sports Illustrated).

That line was always likely to cut through once the tournament began. The World Cup is being sold as a North American celebration, but US entry rules, travel restrictions and tougher border rhetoric have already shaped the experience for some foreign supporters.

That does not mean any potential boos were directly tied to Vance’s comments or Donald Trump’s immigration policy. Stadium reactions can be messy, emotional and hard to separate from sporting rivalry.

But the timing is awkward. If the US flag did receive jeers, even from part of the crowd, Vance’s words help explain why some fans may view America’s co-hosting role through politics as much as football.