
Meet the ‘Papabiles': The six men who could become the next pope
death
of
Pope Francis
is fraught with difficulty.
In the conclave taking place in the Vatican, the following are considered papal candidates or 'papabile' – translated from the Italian 'pope-able':
Cardinal Mario Grech, from Malta
Cardinal Mario Grech talks to reporters during a press conference in 2023. Photograph: AP
From the tiny island of Gozo off Malta, Cardinal Grech (68), the former Bishop of Gozo, has displayed a similar mindset to Francis in his addresses to Synods of Bishops in Rome. In a December 2018 interview, he said: ''Black' and 'white' still exist; but the grey area in-between has grown. It is in the grey areas that we must search. That's why I said that I am wary of those priests, or Christians, who feel they already know all the answers. No one can make that claim. We all have to continue searching.'
He has been central, as secretary general of the Synod of Bishops, to the ongoing synodal process initiated by Pope Francis. He is also familiar with the Vatican, having served on the Roman Rota, and he had been a bishop in Malta for more than 18 years. Coming from a small country is an advantage too, not least where geopolitics is concerned. Francis made him a cardinal in 2020.
READ MORE
Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, from The Philippines
Cardinal Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle attends a mass at St Peter's basilica in The Vatican, on April 30. Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty
Cardinal Tagle (66) is the former archbishop of Manila in Asia's most populous Catholic country and from a continent where Catholicism is growing fast. He has had extensive experience at the Vatican as prefect of its Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples. His mother was Chinese and he studied for seven years in the US and is close to the thinking of Pope Francis on most matters.
Ordained in 1982, he became a bishop in 2001 and went on to serve as the Archbishop of Manila from 2011 to 2020. He was appointed Cardinal by Pope Benedict XVI in 2012, the seventh Filipino to be named a cardinal.
[
Pope Francis obituary: Outsider who attempted to return the church to the people and away from clericalism
]
Cardinal Tagle has also been to Ireland twice. In 2012 he spoke at the 50th International Eucharistic Congress, in Dublin, and again at the World Meeting of Families in 2018 where 'Chito', as he is called, proved something of a charmer. He was also believed to be in the running at the 2013 conclave but was considered too young then.
Cardinal Matteo Maria Zuppi, from Italy
Italian cardinal Matteo Maria Zuppi attends the Seventh Novemdiale mass at St Peter's basilica, following the funeral of Pope Francis. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty
Cardinal Zuppi (69), Archbishop of Bologna and president of the Italian Bishops' Conference, might have a strong chance if the conclave thinks it is time for another Italian pope following a Polish pontiff, a German one and an Argentinian pope
A man very much in the Francis mould, he said last year that faith in God was not always necessary, as there are notable examples of altruism even among those who lack it. Loving one's neighbour was what mattered, he said.
In 2023 Pope Francis appointed him to lead the Vatican diplomatic mission to ease tensions in the
Ukraine
conflict and promote gestures of humanity which might lay foundations for a just peace. He visited Kyiv, Moscow, Washington and Beijing.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, from Italy
Cardinal Secretary of State of Vatican City Pietro Parolin celebrates the mass next to the statue of Our Lady of Fatima ahead of the candlelight procession at the Shrine of Fatima, central Portugal, in 2023. Photograph: Patricia De Melo Moreira/AFP/Getty.
Another Italian contender is Cardinal Parolin (70), from Schiavon in northern Italy, who has been the Vatican secretary of state since October 2013, almost for the entirety of Francis's papacy. Cardinal Parolin
met US vice-president JD Vance at the Vatican last Saturday
.
Cardinal Kevin Farrell, originally from Ireland
Cardinal Kevin Farrell was born in Dublin in 1947 Photograph: Paolo Santalucia/AP
Irish eyes will be on Cardinal Farrell (77), originally from Drimnagh, Dublin, and present Camerlengo at the Vatican overseeing its affairs until a new pope is elected. He entered the Congregation of the Legionaries of Christ in 1966 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1978.
He served as chaplain of the Legion of Christ's apostolic movement Regnum Christi at the University of Monterrey in Mexico and later denied having prior knowledge of sexual abuse by Legion of Christ's founder Marcial Maciel.
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Who will be the next pope after Francis and how does the process work?
]
He left the Legionaries and, in 1984, became a priest in the Archdiocese of Washington, becoming auxiliary bishop and chief adviser to the late Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who was later stripped of his ministry following multiple allegations of child sex abuse. Cardinal Farrell denied all knowledge of McCarrick's abuses.
Most of his clerical life has been spent in the US, where he was Bishop of Dallas. In 2016 Pope Francis appointed him as prefect of the Vatican's Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life. It was in that role he visited Ireland with Francis in 2018. He was appointed Camerlengo by Francis the following year, putting him in a pivotal role in the run-up to this conclave.
Cardinal Peter Turkson, from Ghana
Cardinal Peter Turkson. File photograph: Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters
The leading African papabile is Cardinal Turkson (75) from Ghana. The first cardinal from the African country, he has extensive Vatican experience and a reputation for being strong on interreligious dialogue, no doubt helped by his own background. His mother was Methodist, while a paternal uncle was Muslim. But his age and the conservative nature of the African church may not help him.
It is believed unlikely an African pope will emerge from this conclave. This is due mainly to the refusal of the Catholic bishops of Africa and Madagascar in a 2024 statement in response to Pope Francis's declaration in 2023 allowing priests to offer blessings to same-sex couples. The African bishops, instead, asserted that such unions were 'contrary to the will of God'.
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Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Pope tells crowd of one million young Catholics ‘a different world is possible'
Pope Leo has told more than a million Catholic youths at a closing Mass for a weeklong encounter with the next generation of faithful that they are 'the sign that a different world is possible', where conflicts can be resolved with dialogue, not weapons. In his closing blessing for the Jubilee of Youth, the pope remembered the young people of Gaza and Ukraine and other countries 'bloodied by war' who could not join the celebration. 'We are closer than ever to young people who suffer the most serious evils, which are caused by other human beings,' the pope said. 'We are with the young people of Gaza. We are with the young people of Ukraine, with those of every land bloodied by war. 'My young brothers and sisters, you are the sign that a different world is possible. A world of fraternity and friendship, where conflicts are not resolved with weapons, but with dialogue.' Young people wake up after spending the night at the Tor Vergata field in Rome as part of the event. Photograph: Andrew Medichini/AP The young people camped in sprawling fields southeast of Rome overnight after attending a vigil service for the Jubilee of Youth on Saturday, also presided by the pope – who has been ferried to and from Vatican City by helicopter. The Vatican said more than a million young people were present, along with 7,000 priests and 450 bishops. The special jubilee celebration is part of the holy year that is expected to draw 32 million people to the Vatican for the centuries-old pilgrimage to the seat of Catholicism. During the Sunday homily, the pope urged participants to 'spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith' when they return home to some 150 countries. 'Aspire to great things, to holiness, wherever you are,' the pope urged them. 'Do not settle for less. You will then see the light of the gospel growing every day, in you and around you.' Pope Leo led Mass with an estimated one million people. Photograph: Andrew Medichini/AP The pope reminded the crowd their next encounter will be for World Youth Day, set for August 3rd-8th in 2027, in Seoul, South Korea. The week has been a joyous gathering marked by bands of youths singing hymns as they move down cobblestoned streets, praying rosaries in piazzas and standing for hours at the Circus Maximus to confess their sins to priests offering the sacrament in a dozen languages. The pope also shared tragic news on Saturday. Two young people who had made the pilgrimage to Rome had died, one reportedly of cardiac arrest, while a third was in hospital. Rain overnight awakened the faithful but did not dampen their spirits. Soemil Rios (20), from Puerto Rico, said: 'At least we were a little covered, but we still got a bit wet. We lost our voices a little. It was cold, but we woke up to a beautiful sun and view. 'Despite the difficulties, it was very nice and very special to have been part of this historic moment.'


Irish Times
26-07-2025
- Irish Times
President Michael D Higgins' engagements decrease over second term, Áras diary shows
In May, President Michael D Higgins took the second of two trips to the Vatican this year as he attended the inauguration of Pope Leo XIV . The first trip, the previous month, was for the funeral of Pope Francis . Footage from the second visit shows Mr Higgins, who turned 84 in April, meeting Pope Leo, approaching him with the aid of two walking sticks. The mobility issues were familiar to anyone who has observed the President at recent public appearances whether it be attendance at sporting events or garden parties for community groups at Áras an Uachtaráin. READ MORE As the President nears the end of his second term in office, the trips for events surrounding the papal succession are Mr Higgins's only overseas engagements so far this year. An Irish Times analysis of his diary shows trips outside Dublin on the island of Ireland have also fallen back. And the overall number of public engagements involving the President have almost halved from more than 28 per month in 2019 – the first full year of his second term – to about 15 per month this year and last. The reduction in Mr Higgins's engagements schedule is understandable given the stroke he suffered at the end of February 2024. [ The presidency is not a Rose of Tralee contest for over-35s Opens in new window ] President Michael D Higgins with wife Sabina at The National Day of Commemoration Ceremony, to honour Irishmen and Irishwomen who died in war or on service with the United Nations and other international organisations in the service of peace. Photograph: Stephen Collins/ Collins Photos Little over a week later he made a public appearance voting in the family and care referendums. Within two months he delivered a lengthy speech at the University of Manchester, took questions and met attendees over the course of some three hours. What Mr Higgins has himself described as a 'form of mild stroke' – coupled with pre-existing arthritis – left physical, but not cognitive effects. It has affected his left side and balance. The President continues to perform all of his constitutional duties, including considering and signing Bills into law, carrying out judicial appointments and conducting other official roles such as welcoming ambassadors and world leaders. Mr Higgins remains outspoken on issues such as the horror in Gaza and has delivered speeches at arenas like the United Nations and attended commemorations, including the 50th anniversary of the bombings in Dublin and Monaghan. He is not alone among the ranks of Irish presidents in dealing with the vagaries of age. For instance, Ireland's first president Douglas Hyde used a wheelchair after suffering a stroke at the age of 80. He remained president for five more years. However, the current office holder is living in a mass media era, and the visibility of the challenges of older age in high office are perhaps more evident today. Mr Higgins himself spoke about his mobility issues at the National Ploughing Championships last September. He told reporters at the time: 'As I'm coming through the physiotherapy, sometimes I have balance problems and that's why I would use [the sticks]. 'I have from previous times very heavy arthritis – so the culmination of all of this occasionally means I can't run quite like I did.' The entries in the engagements diary published by Áras an Uachtaráin shows Mr Higgins's 2019 schedule listing 344 items; travel to Britain, a State visit to Germany, a trip to New York where he addressed the United Nations General Assembly and a trip that included stops in Greece, Cyprus and Lebanon. There were 29 trips in Ireland outside Dublin that included 42 engagements. Diary entries dropped in 2020 (156) and 2021 (152) due to restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic. During that period Mr Higgins sought to engage with people in other ways, including recording more than 150 video messages. The President's diary showed 252 engagements in 2022, including five overseas trips, and 208 engagements in 2023, including four trips abroad. In 2022, there were 21 trips within Ireland including 26 engagements outside Dublin and the corresponding number for 2023 was 16 trips and 23 engagements. In the diary in 2024, the year he suffered the stroke, there were 174 engagements listed, including two visits overseas, to Manchester and New York. As of July 23rd this year, Mr Higgins's diary has 105 entries including the two trips to Rome and the Vatican. The Áras outlined how Mr Higgins engaged with at least 29 world leaders and other dignitaries during the trips to New York and Rome, including with former US president Joe Biden and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy . This year has seen four trips and five engagements outside of Dublin, including delivery of the keynote address at the National Famine Commemoration in Co Limerick. A 1,500-word running statement from the Áras sets out details of Mr Higgins's activities during his second term. It said serving as Ireland's ninth president has been the 'greatest honour' of Mr Higgins's life and he 'appreciates the strong bond and support which he has had with the Irish people'. President Michael D Higgins leading the annual Arbour Hill ceremony to commemorate members of the 1916 Rising. Photograph: Alan Betson/ The Irish Times It outlined how 'over the last month alone' the President has, among other engagements, completed this year's series of seven garden parties, has met dignitaries including the director general of the World Health Organisation and the president of Lithuania, held an Article 28 meeting with the Taoiseach, and attended the National Day of Commemoration, the All-Ireland Hurling Final and the funeral of Brother Kevin Crowley. The statement said the President and his wife Sabina have also continued to open up the Áras, welcoming between 15,000 to 20,000 people per year – often from disadvantaged groups – to garden parties, concerts and other occasions. 'It is also important to note that the number of courtesy calls and visits do not reflect the entirety of the role,' the statement said, and that the President 'spends a significant amount of time' preparing speeches and partaking in meetings. It said Mr and Mrs Higgins are 'very conscious of their role as public figures and the opportunity which it presents them to show empathy, understanding and provide a degree of inspiration to those suffering from their own challenges'. 'It is for this reason that they have both chosen to speak publicly about the health challenges which they have faced in recent years – in President Higgins' case his stroke and, in Sabina's case, her experience with breast cancer.' 'While the President's stroke has impacted on the care he must take with his balance and mobility, it is the President's strong hope that his facing of these challenges will have been a source of support and encouragement for others who have suffered from the condition and served as a positive example of all the things that those suffering from a stroke can in many cases continue to do, regardless of their age,' the statement said. Mr Higgins was aged 70 when he fought and won the 2011 presidential election. Questions raised about his age during the race were viewed by many as ageist. During that campaign he indicated he would not seek a second term, though at his final press conference he did leave the door open to the possibility. A reporter put the question to him and he replied: 'Well, I can't predict the love of a nation.' At the launch of his re-election campaign in 2018, Mr Higgins was asked about his age by reporters. Then 77, he said: 'My health is excellent... I am very fit and I am really looking forward to getting into the campaign.' He added: 'I have much more energy than in 2011 because I got my knee done [operated on]. 'I don't drink and don't smoke and I have a yoga teacher.' Mr Higgins romped home to victory in the 2018 election with more than 822,000 first preference votes. One source who attended last month's Bloomsday Garden Party at the Áras, where Mr Higgins is said to have delivered an hour-long speech, said: 'He's still sharp as a pin.' In the statement to The Irish Times, the Áras argued that implication of the newspaper's queries 'would appear to be that challenges with mobility should be considered a bar on the ability of someone to do the job of President'. It added: 'This is a deeply disappointing position and one that is completely out of keeping with academic opinions on positive ageing.' The statement highlighted a 2018 letter to The Irish Times from Professor Rose Anne Kenny which criticised questions raised at the time about Mr Higgins's suitability to seek a second term because of his age as 'blatantly ageist'. The seven-year presidential term is very long with an often-gruelling schedule. The two current contenders in the upcoming election – Fine Gael's Mairead McGuinness and Independent TD Catherine Connolly – though younger than Mr Higgins when he ran in 2011 – may yet face questions over whether they would still wish to be president 14 years from now.


Irish Times
23-07-2025
- Irish Times
Trump accuses Obama of ‘treason' over 2016 election in stunning attack
There is a peculiar deal that world leaders must make with themselves when they sit down beside president Donald Trump in the Oval Office . Yes, they are entering the sanctuary of arguably the most fabled political office in the world. But they are also entering the stream of consciousness of Donald J Trump himself, bystanders and props in whatever subject on which he feels the need to vent. On Tuesday, it was the turn of the president of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos Jr. After a few civil remarks about the historic and economic relations between the nations and an inevitable trade agreement, Marcos was invited to sit back and watch as his host accused a former US president, Barack Obama , of 'treason' and 'sedition'. The president spoke quickly and fluently and at length and managed to not once mention the name of the ghost who hangs over a stagnant summer week in Washington, DC, Jeffrey Epstein. The clamour, from Republican Maga supporters and several prominent legislators, to release the files into the public domain will not die down. Over on Capitol Hill, House speaker Mike Johnson called an early summer recess rather than take a vote on the issue of releasing the files on the investigation into the late financier. Meanwhile, it was announced that the Department of Justice would seek to interview Ghislaine Maxwell, the daughter of the former English newspaper baron Robert Maxwell, and a former girlfriend of Epstein's, at her Florida prison. She is currently serving 20 years for sex trafficking minors in consortium with Epstein. She remains the lone conviction in the Epstein investigation. READ MORE President Trump cocked an ear when this issue was brought up in the Oval Office before launching into a surreal attack on the 44th president. 'I don't know anything about it,' Trump began when Ghislaine Maxwell's name bounced around the walls of the Oval Office – a weird moment in itself. 'They're going to what ... meet her? Yeah, I don't know about it but I think it is something that sounds appropriate to do.' Among the officials involved in that interview would be Todd Blanche, Donald Trump's personal attorney during last year's Manhattan trial and now the deputy attorney general of the United States. President Donald Trump and president Ferdinand Marcos Jr of the Philippines speak in the Oval Office of the White House. Photograph: Kenny Holston/The New York Times 'I have no concern,' Trump said in relation to that. 'He's a very talented person. He's very smart. I didn't know that they were going to do it. I don't really follow that too much. It's sort of a witch hunt. The witch hunt you should be talking about is they caught president Obama absolutely cold. Tulsi Gabbard. What they did to this country starting in 2016 but going up to 2020 – they tried to rig the election. And they got caught. And there should be very severe consequences for that. After what they did to me, whether it is right or wrong it is time to start going after people. Obama has been caught directly. His orders are on the papers. The papers are signed. They were highly classified. And what they did in 2016 and 2020 is very criminal. It is criminal at the highest level.' The 'papers' referenced by Trump related to last week's report issued by Tulsi Gabbard, his national security director, on the 2016 election that claimed to show 'a treasonous conspiracy' to insinuate Russian electoral voting interference designed to harm Trump, who defeated Hillary Clinton that November. Senior Democrats dismissed the report as error strewn and either inept or mischievous in its finding. Virginia senator Mark Warner, who sits on the Intelligence Committee, argued that the report mixed two distinct issues: Russian hacking into voting systems and Russian influence on public opinion. 'We're talking about apples and oranges,' Warner said. 'The Russians were not successful at manipulating our election infrastructure, nor did we say they were.' Obama and Trump's most recent public interaction took place on the snowy January morning when they chatted and laughed amicably in their pew as they gathered with the other living presidents – George W Bush, Bill Clinton and Joe Biden – for the funeral of Jimmy Carter. But on a swampy July morning, Trump once again cast Obama as his nemesis and suggested that the former president should be the primary target of an investigation. It was an audacious diversionary tactic, like attempting to draw the crowd away from one circus by setting up another in the adjacent field and promising more lions, more fire-eaters. 'Well based on what I read – and I read pretty much what you read – it should be president Obama. He started it. And Biden – he was there with him. And Comey. Right here. This is the room. It is much more beautiful now, but that's okay. It's there. He's guilty. This was treason. This was ... every word you can think of. They tried to steal the election. They tried to obfuscate the election. They did things that nobody has ever even imagined.' 'This man', he said, remembering Marcos for a second, 'has seen some pretty rough countries but you have never seen anything like it. President Obama – it was his concept, his idea. But he also got it from Hillary Clinton, crooked Hillary Clinton. This is the biggest scandal in the history of our country. And it really goes on to even the autopen because it all relates to [the] same thing. It all started – the same sick minds. The autopen was used by people and Biden knew nothing about it.' It was a stunning attack and one that could add to a complex mess that is of the Republicans' own creation. For the first time, the decision not to release the Epstein files has caused a serious breach of faith between Trump and prominent Maga figures. Now, he is promising an investigation into president Obama which he knows either will not happen or lead to nothing. Having called those supporters pushing for more clarity on the Epstein files 'stupid' last week, he now risks stretching their incredulity to breaking point. Obama, who has remained above the fray to a degree that has frustrated many Democrats, issued a swift and scornful dismissal through his spokesperson, Patrick Rodenbush. 'Out of respect for the office of the presidency, our office does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response. But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one. These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction. Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes. These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee, led by then Chairman Marco Rubio.' House speaker Mike Johnson affected the role of patient pastor as he made light of the Repubican rebellion. Photograph:By Tuesday evening, a gathering of Republican lawmakers was under way in the White House as president Trump heaped lavish praise on speaker Mike Johnson. In the morning, Johnson had defended his decision to announce summer recess a week early, announcing that 'there is no daylight between the White House and the House.' But some Republicans have, for the first time, begun to ask questions which president Trump could do without. One of their number, Thomas Massie, is in outright revolt in his determination to have the Epstein files released. Johnson affected the role of patient pastor to a sometimes unruly flock as he made light of this rebellion. 'Some people I try to protect from themselves. They kick and scream and bite their own colleagues. I don't understand Thomas Massie's motivation. He could have brought his discharge petition any time over the past four-and-a-half years. I try to follow Ronald Reagan's 11th commandment – never speak ill of another Republican. My gosh, it's hard to do sometimes. Bless his heart. I don't know what else to say about it.' Reagan's old edict has been one that Republican representatives and senators have followed devoutly through the first six months of this term. But for the first time now come whispers of discontent. Meanwhile, old photographs and snatches of film keep lurching out of the 1990s, when Trump was just a big-haired scenester in Manhattan, out on the town with Epstein. The dead financier's brother, Mark, described them on Tuesday evening as 'best friends'. Mark Epstein has no issues about his late brother's guilt. But he believes he was murdered in the Manhattan correction centre. Donald Trump's on-the-town times with Epstein were a full decade before the revelations into the financier's sexual abuse of minors were investigated. There has been no suggestion that Trump had knowledge of Epstein's crimes. But the entire saga and something about the idea of the release of the files has left him addled. He has lost his grip on the narrative and it hovers now on the skyline over Capitol Hill like a massive, ominous hot air balloon that he cannot make disappear. The late night talkshow satirists are gleefully sharpening pencils. The jokes are incessant. And at the heart of this, unanswered questions as to who knew what about a monstrous dead guy who sexually abused minors while schmoozing with the 'elite' of American society a couple of decades ago. One of those victims, Virginia Giuffre, the woman whose testimony was crucial in Epstein's 2019 arrest, took her own life in April, aged 41. Her name has scarcely been mentioned throughout this entire bleak fiasco.