The world cheered as history was made.
Then the attacks began.
As Pope Leo XIV stepped onto the balcony, some saw a humble pastor from Chicago; others saw a “woke globalist” enemy. Trump praised him, yet parts of MAGA world turned on him instantly. Their fury targeted his compassion for migrants, his life in Peru, his calls for mercy and unity. In a fractured, suspicious age, even a pope’s first words of peace became a battleground. The question now isn’t just what kind of pope he will be, but whether a world addicted to rage will allow him to even begi… Continues…
Pope Leo XIV’s story begins far from the marble halls of the Vatican, on Chicago’s South Side, where faith was woven into ordinary struggle. Years in Peru hardened his sense of reality but softened his judgment of people; he learned to listen before he spoke, to stand with those the world preferred not to see. That same instinct for closeness now collides with a culture that reads every gesture through a partisan lens.
His critics brand his concern for migrants and the poor as ideology, but to him it is biography: the streets he walked, the families he visited, the languages he learned to speak. The Vatican insists his papacy will not be about American politics, yet America keeps dragging him back in.
Between Trump’s cordial congratulations and the online rage machine, Leo XIV faces a brutal test: can a pope still talk about mercy without being claimed—or cancelled—by one side? READ MORE BELOW