This claim has no basis.
The source you posted is from The Economic Times, an Indian economics news provider. According to the mediabiasefactcheck.com, The Economic Times is a questionable source, with low credibility.
The source of this claim is a statement made by Fr. Dan Reehill, who is an exorcist, and Catholic priest from the The Diocese of Nashville. The statement was made about Taylor Swift's Performance of Willow during her eras tour.
Here is the statement: https://x.com/Church_POP/status/1729285722459320371
Here is a video of Swift's performance:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yt-MsgPe1G0
During Fr. Reehill's statement, he cites Wicca as the growing movement of modern Witchcraft, but makes incorrect claims about the basics of Wicca beliefs. “look at the earth with the elements of water, fire, earth, and sky.”(0:17-0:23).
Wicca has five elements: Water, Fire, Earth, Air, and Aether(Spirit) which indicates that Fr. Reehill is probably not a reliable source of information regarding modern witchcraft.
Fr. Reehill also claims that Taylor Swift is “imitating these rituals, with these orbs, and black capes”. I found no evidence that either orbs, or black capes are involved in modern Wicca rituals.
On another note, Wicca does not have demons in its belief system. Demon evocation is therefore not a part of Wicca rituals. “It is important to stress that there are no evil entities within Wicca, no demons or Christian devil”(Ball p4).
Citations:
Ball, Caroline. "Wicca, Witchcraft and the Goddess Revival: An examination of the
growth of Wicca in post-war America." Beavis, MA & Hwang, HH-S., M.(eds.) Goddesses in Myth, History and Culture, Lytle Creek, CA: Mago Books (2018) https://repository.derby.ac.uk/download/96b73e67b16e59843f808b90c9ce233fe7b9f0d1355bb5d1268d2457f112df26/365479/Chapter%2019%20-%20Goddess%20in%20Witchcraft.pdf. Accessed 11 Feb. 2025