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M.I.A. sues Kid Cudi for $2.8M over tour exit

M.I.A. has taken her feud with Kid Cudi into the courtroom, filing a $2.8 million lawsuit that accuses the rapper of unlawfully firing her from his Rebel Ragers Tour and then painting her as a problem to “save” a struggling run of shows.

According to newly filed legal documents, obtained by Variety, the British star claims she was guaranteed $2.8 million by tour promoter Live Nation – a fee she says was owed to her “regardless of what she said on stage.” Her team argues that Cudi had no contractual right to remove her, alleging he personally instructed Live Nation to cut her from the bill after the opening dates.

In a statement included in the filing, her camp says: “Kid Cudi’s attempts to silence freedom of artistic expression and speech on his ‘Rebel Rager’s Tour’ cannot go unchallenged.”

They accuse him of feigning outrage over comments he now calls “offensive,” claiming his decision to drop her was really “a desperate attempt to sell tickets for his tour that was drastically underselling.”

The lawsuit goes further, alleging Cudi “portrayed himself as an aggrieved headliner forced to protect his fans” while misrepresenting what she actually said on stage.

It argues: “M.I.A. was terminated to generate publicity for the Tour… She was contractually allowed to say whatever she wanted on stage.”

The legal battle follows a fiery public back‑and‑forth earlier this year, when Cudi abruptly removed her from the tour after fan complaints surfaced online. M.I.A. quickly hit back, insisting her remarks had been twisted and taken out of context.

During the Dallas show on May 2, she told the crowd she couldn’t perform Illygirl, saying: “I can’t do Illygirl – let’s just say some of you out there might not love that choice.” She then addressed criticism of her politics, adding: “I’ve been cancelled for all kinds of things, but I never thought it would happen because I’m a brown Republican voter.”

Cudi later said he’d warned his team in advance due to her history of sparking debate, calling the situation “really disappointing” and insisting he couldn’t keep an opener who made fans uncomfortable.

M.I.A. responded by defending her set choices, explaining she teased Illygirl to highlight visa issues affecting her team, and followed it with a track containing the line “F*** THE LAW,” which she said she still stands by “if the law is unjust.” She urged critics not to twist her meaning, writing: “Do not gas light my words. That is the work of Satan.”

Her posts then moved into faith, immigration and morality, arguing she has long tackled those themes without mainstream backing. She also revisited her pre‑election prediction about Donald Trump’s win, calling it intuition rather than endorsement and suggesting she’s often ahead of the curve. She wrote that she now wants to revise that prediction, swapping RFK for Republican congressman Thomas Massie.