What happens next after Francis' death? How the Catholic Church will pick a successor
The death of Pope Francis has triggered a period of mourning in the Vatican and signals the start of a millennia-old process of picking a new pontiff.
It is a procedure steeped in tradition, but one which has been subtly updated for the modern world.
Cardinals from around the world must gather for the conclave in which Francis' successor is selected. It typically takes between two and three weeks for a pope to be chosen, though it can stretch slightly beyond that if cardinals struggle to agree on a candidate.
The voting process is kept secret but will take place with the eyes of the world on the Vatican and amid intense scrutiny of the Catholic Church – an institution whose reputation has been stained by the scandal of child sex abuse within its ranks, overshadowing the legacies of successive popes.
Here's what you need to know about the coming days and weeks.
The 'Papal Interregnum' – the period between the death of one pope and the election of another – began when Francis passed away on Monday.
Cardinals must now decide exactly when the funeral can take place, and after that, when conclave can begin. But much of the timeline is predetermined; the pope's death triggered the start of nine days of mourning known as the Novendiales, and the pope must be buried between the fourth and sixth day after death.
The body of the pope must also be displayed at St. Peter's Basilica for mourning, and a mass will take place on each day. Mourners lined up for miles to see the body of Pope John Paul II, the last serving pontiff to die, in 2005.
It is likely that unofficial events will take place in tandem in Buenos Aires, where Francis lived before becoming the Bishop of Rome. In Warsaw, more than 200,000 gathered at the site where John Paul II, then Karol Wojtyla, returned as the new pope in 1979.
Then, at the end of the period of mourning, a large funeral Mass will take place at St. Peter's. This is historically a huge event, with dignitaries expected from around the world. John Paul II's funeral was attended by then-President George W. Bush and his two predecessors, Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush.
When a pope dies, the dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals calls for a meeting of all cardinals eligible to vote – those under the age of 80. They must all travel to the Vatican to do so. There are currently 136 eligible cardinals. But it's worth remembering that in 1996, John Paul II set the maximum number of cardinals allowed to participate at 120.
Conclave is not expected to begin earlier than 15 days, nor later than 20 days, after the pope's death – though it could get underway sooner if all the cardinal electors arrive in Rome quickly.
Inside the Sistine Chapel, the codified home of conclave, paper ballots are passed out to each cardinal, who writes the name of their chosen candidate below the words 'Eligo in Summum Pontificem' (Latin for 'I elect as supreme pontiff').
Technically, any Roman Catholic male can be elected pope. But the last pope not chosen from the College of Cardinals was Urban VI in 1379.
When they're done, each cardinal - in order of seniority - walks to the altar to ceremoniously place his folded ballot into a chalice. The votes are then counted, and the result is read to the cardinals.
If a cardinal has received two-thirds of the vote, he becomes the new pope.
As many as four votes a day - two in the morning and two in the afternoon - can be held on the second, third and fourth days of the conclave. The fifth day is set aside to break for prayer and discussion, and then voting can continue for an additional seven rounds. After that, there's another break and the pattern resumes.
unknown content item
-
News cameras will have their lenses fixed on a chimney on a Vatican rooftop for days - because that's where the first confirmation of a new pope will be seen.
Ballots are burned after the votes, once in the morning and once in the afternoon. If a pope hasn't been elected, the ballots will be burned along with a chemical that makes the smoke black.
If white smoke billows from the chimney, however, it means 'sede vacante' (in Latin 'with the chair vacant') is over and a new pontiff has been chosen.
Traditionally, about 30 to 60 minutes after the white smoke, the new pope will appear on the balcony overlooking St. Peter's Square.
His papal name will be announced, and the new pope will then speak briefly and say a prayer. His formal coronation will take place days after his election. The last two popes have been inaugurated in St. Peter's Square.
The election of a pope is a deeply consequential decision for the Catholic Church, whose followers number some 1.3 billion around the world, according to the Vatican.
The record and beliefs of the next man to take the mantle will be scrutinized for clues as to the church's next move.
Francis' election was seen as something of a surprise; the first non-European leader in centuries, whose approach to many social issues was less strict than that of his predecessors.
Though he did not radically alter Catholic practices, Francis surprised global observers with comments on homosexuality and the death penalty that were far more accepting than Benedict XVI. Whether the cardinals choose to continue down that path, or revert towards a hardline interpreter of biblical teachings, will be one question that hangs over the election.
The consuming abuse scandal is another. In 2013, a group representing survivors of sexual abuse by priests named a 'Dirty Dozen' list of cardinals it said would be the worst candidates for pope based on their handling of child sex abuse claims or their public comments about the cases.
All but one have aged out of eligibility or died, but undoubtedly the track record of the next pontiff when it comes to responding to and dealing with allegations of abuse will be pored over.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
Amid ICE Sweeps and Travel Bans, Here's How to Support Black Immigrants in Atlanta
While non-Black Latino immigrants became the focus of many of the protests held in cities across the country in response to Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions this week, Atlanta's Black immigrant community — the fourth largest in the country — is refusing to take a back seat. Pew Research estimates around 200,000 Black immigrants, mostly from Jamaica, Haiti, and Nigeria, call metro Atlanta home. Black immigrants often find themselves simultaneously ignored and under a spotlight because of how racialized anti-immigrant political sentiment has become. Read More: Atlanta Immigration Protests Draws Hundreds Amid Tear Gas and Fireworks Black immigrants, who may be Latin, Caribbean, or African, must navigate a specific set of challenges with how both race and immigration status impact their daily lives. The Black Alliance for Just Immigration works to advocate for and empower immigrants from across the African diaspora. In addition to local chapters in Georgia, California, New York, and Arizona, BAJI's legal resources and clinics are available virtually for anyone in need. Their legal and policy staff provide regular breakdowns of President Donald Trump's latest immigration-related executive orders and host a bi-weekly asylum support webinar. Local chapters are run by BAJIs staff organizers who host events and training relevant to the community. Atlanta chapter organizers recently held a workshop at the Congolese Community of Atlanta's general assembly meeting on the public charge rule. A policy implemented by the Department of Homeland Security in 2022 that disqualifies an immigrant from obtaining a green card if it is deemed they are likely to become dependent on public benefits in the future. Capital B Atlanta spoke with Nana Gyamfi, BAJI's executive director, about the current political climate and the intersection of Black and immigrant identity. Nana Gyamfi: I think Black immigrants need to be aware that our blackness adds another very critical level to the type of profiling that we are subjected to. Even in diverse places like Atlanta, New York, or Chicago, we are still being left out of conversations on the impact of the federal immigration crackdown. What we know from the data, as well as anecdotal experiences, is that most law enforcement interactions with Black immigrants begin as racial profiling that then goes down another road when the officer hears an accent or realizes there is a language barrier. As a result, Black migrants are detained, deported and held in solitary confinement at a disproportionately higher rate. One example is the new travel ban, where eight out of 12 banned countries — and three out of the seven partially banned countries — are Black or African. That doesn't even include banned countries with large Black populations, like Cuba and Venezuela. So even though most people are focused on the Muslim element, the face of the ban is really a Black face. Immigrant folks [need to be] really clear about what their rights are and exercise those rights. Whether they are green card holders, have temporary protective status, if they're an international student, on a work visa, or even undocumented. They have basic rights that are afforded by the Constitution of the United States. It's really important that they know, for example, not to sign anything. There are situations where an immigrant is presented with a document and told, 'If you want to leave, if you want to see your kids, if you want to get back to your spouse, if you want to be able to work, then you need to sign.' Law enforcement will tell them, 'If you sign this, we'll let you go, things will be easier for you.' This happens particularly to Black immigrants who don't speak English as a first language or at all. People have unknowingly signed voluntary deportation papers, or an acknowledgement that they are someone who they aren't without knowing. It's really important that people understand the right to remain silent is not just verbal, it is also written. Make it clear that you don't want to talk and that you're not going to sign anything. Read More: Black Immigrants in Atlanta Mobilize Amid Rising Deportation Threats Ask for an attorney. Whether you have one or not, you're not entitled to one, but you are entitled to ask for one. Don't consent to any searches or produce any documents. Don't do anything that can be perceived as you going along with providing information, because you have a right not to. No, immigrants have the same rights across the board. The difference in a sanctuary city is that local law enforcement is not supposed to act as an extension of immigration enforcement. But what we are seeing now in sanctuary cities like Los Angeles is that local law enforcement may not be acting like ICE, but they are certainly playing backup to ICE and other federal agents that are engaged in immigration enforcement. In Georgia, local law enforcement is directly engaged in immigration enforcement. But the rights of immigrants haven't changed. This piece is so important for people like me, who have immigrant parents but were born here and have U.S. citizenship, which gives us the capacity to move in a more privileged way. It's really important for us to also know those rights and to help to remind folks that we see being questioned or detained. In Atlanta metro, that isn't just ICE, but also includes local law enforcement that has been contracted to work alongside them. Read More: Black Immigrants in Atlanta Face New Risks As Trump Signs Laken Riley Act Immigration Court is also public, so people can go down there and support the people who are doing what they're supposed to do and showing up for their court dates. People who are employers, [and] heads of churches, schools, and hospitals, can also do their part to protect the human rights and dignity of immigrants as they are in those spaces. It doesn't matter that this administration has declared those places are no longer protected, because the protection comes from us as a community. The post Amid ICE Sweeps and Travel Bans, Here's How to Support Black Immigrants in Atlanta appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta.


CNBC
20 hours ago
- CNBC
34-year-old ice cream stand owner in LA raises money for immigrants' rights: 'It means a lot to be able to give back'
Protests are cropping up across the country opposing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and military presence in California. Meanwhile, some Los Angeles business owners are finding their own way to support immigrant, Latino and Hispanic communities targeted by recent federal immigration enforcement raids. SueEllen Mancini, 34, is the owner of Sad Girl Creamery, an LA-based ice cream business that offers Latin-inspired flavors like chocoflan and guava jam cheesecake. She tells CNBC Make It she's unable to protest because she is her mother's primary caretaker. "But I figured, 'OK, we can put our heads together and be able to give back, even if it's just a little bit,'" Mancini say. "And I think the biggest way I could personally give back is monetarily." On Sunday, Mancini says she will donate 20% of sales from her pop-up at downtown LA's Smorgasburg event, including all tips, to The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, or CHIRLA, an LA County-based immigrant rights group. Mancini launched Sad Girl Creamery from her home in 2021 after buying a $300 Whynter ice cream maker. She considers her venture a "microbusiness." Even so, "I think it's important to put your money where your mouth is and really give back to the people who are on the ground trying to make a difference, even if you can't personally be there," Mancini says. "It means a lot to be able to give back to the people who are going through the same situations we've gone through in the past," she says. The latest news of immigration enforcement raids is personal. When Mancini was a teenager, she says her older brother, then 18 years old, was deported. He had been born outside of the country, came to the U.S. as an infant and was unaware of his immigration status, Mancini says. "My brother was only a 1-year old [when he arrived in the U.S.], so America was literally all he knew up until his deportation," Mancini says. "This was before [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals]. My mother later had me here in the U.S., making me the only citizen [and] documented in the family for 25 years." Mancini says she and her family, including her mom and an older sister, are still paying immigration lawyer fees for her brother's return to the U.S., "and it is a painfully long process and really expensive." Mancini works alongside her mom, Maria Lupes, to run Sad Girl Creamery, which operates out of a commercial kitchen in Culver City and sells pints in stores around the metro area. "[My mom has] always been really hard-working and very independent [and] a super quick thinker," Mancini says about working with her mom. "I get everything from her, so her great working aspects and creativity definitely rubs off on me." Mancini, who grew up in Houston, says moving to LA in 2018 helped her embrace her family's roots in Uruguay and Chile. "When I visited the first time I immediately saw how Latino-focused it is, the whole community, and that made me feel close to my own culture," she told the LA Times in 2023. "That made me want to be closer to that side of myself that I had never paid attention to. ... I come from an immigrant family, I grew up that way. I share all those experiences, but I had never expressed it." Roughly 10 million people call LA County home, and some 49% identify as Hispanic or Latino, according to U.S. Census data. Mancini uses her platform around Sad Girl Creamery to raise awareness for mental health issues, too, which she says are still stigmatized in many areas of U.S. Latino culture. Many Latinos face barriers to care. As for her upcoming efforts to raise money for local immigrant groups, "I really hope that we get a lot of people to show up [and] help put more more money towards helping these people," Mancini says. "Come and enjoy ice cream that's literally inspired by these cultures." "Maybe the ice cream might make you feel a little better," Mancini adds. "Things are really scary out there, but as long as we support one another, we can get through this. We're a strong community."

a day ago
Pope Leo XIV's fashion choices make waves, and many wonder what they mean
VATICAN CITY -- When Pope Leo XIV stepped out on the central loggia of St. Peter's Basilica to greet the crowd for the first time after his May 8 election, liturgical fashion aficionados around the globe took note: Gone was the simple white cassock and silver cross favored by Pope Francis. Back was the red satin mozzetta shoulder cape, the burgundy stola with gold embroidery and a gold cross held by a double-stranded silken gold cord. Over Leo's first few weeks, the excitement grew among liturgical fashion-conscious Catholics as they noticed new additions to the wardrobe, or rather a return to the old additions of the papal wardrobe: cufflinks, white pants, lace. After Francis' revolutionary papacy, Vatican watchers are now wondering if Leo's return to the past sartorial look means a return to the past on other things too, including more substantial policy issues. But for tailors at the elite handful of liturgical tailoring shops in Rome, there is hope that Leo's return to the fancier garb of popes past will mean a boon to business if Leo's traditional look has a trickle-down effect from the pope to priests and all those in between. According to the Rev. John Wauck, professor of church communication at the Pontifical Holy Cross University in Rome, Leo's clothing choices are a 'return to form,' and his attire similar to that worn by Pope Benedict XVI, Pope John Paul II and other popes going back to the middle ages. They show 'a respect for tradition,' he said. Such respect for the papal office is important for many conservative Catholics. Many conservatives and traditionalists soured on Francis' informal style and disdain for tradition, which reached its pinnacle with his his crackdown on the old Latin Mass. The old liturgy was celebrated before the modernizing reforms of the 1960s Second Vatican Council; Francis greatly restricted access to the old liturgy, saying it had become a source of division in parishes. Leo has shown strong familiarity with Latin, and has taken to singing the Sunday noontime prayer in Latin. Some traditionalist Catholics are hoping Leo will take the pro-Latin path even further and reverse Francis to allow greater use of the traditional Latin Mass. Massimo Faggioli, professor of theology at Villanova University, where Leo went to college, said it's too early to tell if Leo will reverse Francis' reform. 'It remains to be seen if Leo's more traditional attire and liturgical style means that he will change Francis' strong decisions limiting the so-called 'Latin Mass,'" he said. That said, Faggioli said U.S. conservatives seems particularly happy with Leo's traditional attire, given Francis' disdain for the fashion pomp of the papacy. 'In this sense, Francis might have been a parenthesis or an interlude, more than a changer of the tradition in 'papal style,'' he said in an email. At his inaugural Mass on May 18, 2025, Pope Leo XIV reached out his arm to sprinkle holy water and revealed a shirt with cufflinks, which Francis had largely avoided. He was also wearing an amitto, and an alb held in place by a cingulum. For the non-experts, the amitto is a lacy linen cloth that goes around the neck, the alb is the white tunic worn under the ceremonial vestment, and the cingulum is a braided rope with tassels that serves as a belt. If it weren't for photographers' long lenses relentlessly trained on the pope's every gesture, Leo's switch from Francis's standard black pants to more traditional white papal trousers would have gone completely unnoticed. In addition to the clothing changes, Leo has returned to some other traditions of the Vatican that Francis eschewed. He has shown himself willing to accept the traditional 'baciamano' or kissing of his ring. Francis disliked having his ring kissed and often pulled his hand away if someone tried to kiss it. 'I think that what we see with Pope Leo is a willingness to embrace tradition, even if it risks seeming perhaps more formal than Pope Francis,' Wauck said. The idea is that 'seeing that tradition as a treasure to be conserved and embraced as opposed to something that makes one feel perhaps a little bit standoffish.' It remains to be seen whether Leo will move into the papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace, which stood empty during the 12-year Francis papacy. Francis shocked the world by choosing to live in a small room at the Santa Marta residence at the Vatican, eating his meals in the common dining room. For the Rev. Castro Prudencio, this is all much ado about nothing. "For Pope Francis it was simplicity. Always. And Pope Leo has taken up what Pope Benedict had and many others. That is what the church is like,' he said.