Cardinals Elect Robert Francis Prevost of US as New Pope

Thu May 08 2025
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VATICAN CITY: Robert Francis Prevost was on Thursday elected the first pope from the United States, the Vatican announced.

A moderate who was close to Pope Francis and spent years as a missionary in Peru, he becomes the Catholic Church’s 267th pontiff, taking the papal name Leo XIV.

White smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel and the bells of St Peter’s Basilica rang out on Thursday, signalling that cardinals had elected a new pope to succeed Pope Francis and take charge of the Roman Catholic Church.

The election came on the first full day of voting by the 133 cardinal electors, who secluded themselves behind the Vatican’s medieval walls on Wednesday afternoon.

A joyous crowd in St Peter’s Square cheered and applauded as the first puffs of smoke emerged from a small chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel, where the cardinals have been holding their secret ballot.

“Long Live the Pope!” the crowds cheered in bright sunshine. “We have a pope!” said one sign held aloft.

Pope Francis died on April 21 after ruling the 1.4-billion-member Church for 12 years.

During his reign, he sought to open up the staid institution to the modern world, enacting a range of reforms and allowing debate on divisive issues such as women’s ordination and better inclusion of LGBT Catholics.

While no clear favourites had emerged to succeed him, Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin, who served as the Vatican’s number two under Francis, and Filipino Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle were considered the frontrunners.

Other ‘papabili’ — potential papal candidates in Italian — were France’s Jean-Marc Aveline, Hungary’s Peter Erdo, American Robert Prevost, Italy’s Pierbattista Pizzaballa and Filipino Pablo Virgilio David.

The cardinals will have had to decide whether to pick someone to build on Francis’ vision of greater openness and reform, or choose a more conservative figure.

During the conclave, their only communication with the outside world was through the smoke emerging from the chimney — black for no pope yet picked, white signalling a new pontiff chosen by a majority of at least two-thirds.

The cardinals held an initial inconclusive vote on Wednesday evening and a further two followed on Thursday morning.

They returned to the Sistine Chapel at 4pm (1400 GMT) and at around 6:08pm (1608 GMT), the white smoke emerged.

During the conclave, cardinals were sequestered from the world and sworn to secrecy, their phones and computers confiscated, while they were shuttled between the Sistine Chapel for voting and two Vatican guesthouses to sleep and dine.

The average number of ballots it has taken to be elected over the past 10 conclaves was 7.2. Francis was elected after five in 2013. – Agencies

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