
Vance says it was "pretty crazy" that he met Pope Francis in his last 24 hours
Vice President JD Vance said Wednesday that it was "pretty crazy" that he was among the last officials to meet with Pope Francis before his death earlier this week.
"When I saw him, I didn't know that he had less than 24 hours still on this earth," Vance told reporters in Agra, India. "I think it was a great blessing."
The vice president is on a four-day trip in India with his wife Usha, the first Hindu American second lady, whose parents emigrated to the U.S. from India. Vance's visit with his family comes after they traveled to Italy last week to participate in Holy Week events. Vance noted that plans remain in flux about whether he will attend the pope's funeral in the coming days.
The vice president outlined his brief visit with Francis on Easter Sunday, saying he knew the pope was "very ill," but he "didn't realize how sick he was."
"The thing that I will always remember Pope Francis for is that he was a great pastor," Vance said. "People on the margins, poor people, people suffering from diseases, they saw in Pope Francis an advocate and I think, a true expression of Christian love."
Pope Francis meets with Vice President JD Vance and delegation during an audience at Casa Santa Marta on April 20, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican.
Divisione Produzione Fotografica / Getty Images
Vance added that the pontiff "affected a lot of lives," saying that he tries to remember "that I was lucky that I got to shake his hand and tell him that I pray for him every day, because I did and I do."
Vance and Francis' meeting came after the two men had sharp disagreements on immigration as the pontiff had long condemned the Trump administration's approach. Vance, who converted to Catholicism in 2019, told reporters Wednesday that he's aware of the disagreements the pope had with some of the Trump administration's policies, while noting that he would not "soil the man's legacy by talking about politics."
On the selection of the next pope, the vice president said he would "say a prayer for wisdom" for the Cardinals, saying that "I want them to pick somebody who will be good for the world's Catholics."
"But I'll let them make that decision, and obviously they're entitled to do so," he added.
The vice president's trip to India comes amid President Trump's recent actions on tariffs. Vance arrived in India Monday and met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, after which the leaders touted progress on trade talks.
The vice president told reporters Wednesday that "we're making progress across the board," though he said of the trade discussions more broadly that it's "a little bit too early to prejudge, to say what any of these deals is going to look like."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
WA Medicaid data shared with federal immigration authorities, report says
(Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) Washington is one of a few states whose Medicaid data has reportedly been shared with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which could use it to potentially track down immigrants without legal status. The shared information, including names, addresses, and social security numbers, is from California, Illinois and Washington D.C., on top of Washington state, according to the Associated Press. This comes as the Trump administration seeks to ramp up deportations. Washington provides benefits that mirror Medicaid to immigrants in the U.S. without legal authorization. Enrollment is capped based on available funding, and only state dollars are used to pay for the program. The other states with data handed over offer similar benefits. The agency that runs Washington's Medicaid program, known as Apple Health, wasn't sure 'what information was disclosed or how it may have been used.' 'We've seen the reports and are deeply concerned about the potential misuse of personal health information belonging to Washington Apple Health clients,' state Health Care Authority spokesperson Katie Pope said in an email on Friday. 'We are currently working closely with the Governor's Office and the Attorney General's Office to understand the scope of what occurred, including what data from Washington has been shared and how many individuals may have been affected,' Pope continued. As of this spring, nearly 2 million Washington residents were enrolled in Apple Health, including over 850,000 children. Medicaid, primarily funded by the federal government and run by the states, provides health insurance to low-income residents. Federal law prohibits noncitizens from accessing Medicaid, but states can shell out money for programs that cover immigrants. Washington state lawmakers this year earmarked $150 million for this purpose, enough to continue coverage for about 13,000 people. California and Illinois have moved to freeze or shut down their similar programs. Republicans in Congress have proposed reductions in federal Medicaid reimbursements for states that provide this kind of coverage to immigrants. In a statement, Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin said, 'President Trump consistently promised to protect Medicaid for eligible beneficiaries.' 'To keep that promise after Joe Biden flooded our country with tens of millions of illegal aliens CMS and DHS are exploring an initiative to ensure that illegal aliens are not receiving Medicaid benefits that are meant for law-abiding Americans,' McLaughlin continued. In light of a February executive order from President Donald Trump, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services late last month announced it was reviewing state Medicaid data to ensure federal funds weren't being used on immigrants without legal status. 'Medicaid is not, and cannot be, a backdoor pathway to subsidize open borders,' Mehmet Oz, the agency's administrator, said in a statement at the time. 'States have a duty to uphold the law and protect taxpayer funds.' California, Washington and Illinois shared information about noncitizens receiving health coverage, according to the AP, citing a June 6 memo. 'Protecting the privacy of our Apple Health clients is core to our mission, and we take these concerns very seriously,' said Pope, of the Health Care Authority. 'We'll continue to coordinate with state and federal partners to determine the facts and will take appropriate action as we learn more.' The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services are within the Department of Health and Human Services, run by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose advisers ordered the Medicaid data shared with the Department of Homeland Security, the AP reported Friday. They reportedly shared the information despite pushback from federal Medicaid officials. The sharing came as federal immigration agents conducted immigration raids in California that led to protests. Trump has deployed National Guard troops and Marines in response to the demonstrations.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
What To Know About Iran's Nuclear Program After Israel's Strikes
Air raid sirens sounded in Jerusalem and loud blasts were heard on June 13, as the Israeli military said it had detected a missile launched from Iran. Credit - Jack Guez — AFP via Getty Images Iran's nuclear program suffered one of its most serious setbacks in years on Friday, after Israel launched a series of airstrikes on nuclear sites, top scientists, and military officials in a dramatic escalation of its long-running campaign to contain Tehran's atomic ambitions. Israeli officials described the strikes as a preemptive operation aimed at crippling Iran's ability to build a nuclear weapon, following what they called a sharp and alarming expansion of uranium enrichment over the past six months. Initial damage assessments indicate that the strikes on Iran's Natanz nuclear facility were particularly effective, knocking out the electricity on the underground area where the centrifuges used to enrich uranium are stored, Israel Defense Forces said in a statement Friday. Natanz had been the centerpiece of Iran's nuclear infrastructure and the site where much of its uranium fuel has been produced. On Friday evening, Iranian state media reported that Israel began striking Iran's other major enrichment site—Fordow, which is buried deep within a mountain and is considered nearly impervious to conventional airstrikes. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the campaign a 'strike at the head of Iran's nuclear weaponization program,' and said it would continue 'as many days as it takes' to eliminate the threat. Explosions were reported over Jerusalem and Tel Aviv Friday evening as Iran launched a broad retaliatory strike against Israel. Iran has insisted that it is not developing a bomb and that its nuclear program remains non-weaponized for peaceful energy purposes, though international inspectors have found increasing evidence to the contrary. The United Nations' nuclear watchdog reported that Iran's stockpile of 60% enriched uranium—just below weapons-grade—has grown large enough to produce multiple bombs if further enriched. Analysts say Iran could theoretically produce a bomb's worth of material in as little as a week, and that no other country has that level of uranium without a nuclear weapons program. 'This really was done as a last resort,' says Matt Kroenig, the senior director of the Atlantic Council's Scowcroft Center on international security who served in the Department of Defense and the intelligence community during the Bush, Obama, and Trump Administrations. 'They were out of time. The best estimates were that Iran's dash time to one bomb's worth of weapons grade material was down to about a week.' Read more: Trump Issues Grave Warning to Iran After Israeli Strikes: 'No More Death, No More Destruction' Here's what to know about Iran's nuclear program. Iran's nuclear journey began with American support. In 1957, the United States helped launch Iran's atomic energy program under President Eisenhower's 'Atoms for Peace' initiative, when the two nations were allies. By the 1970s, Iran was working on nuclear reactors with U.S. and European assistance, but that partnership collapsed after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Since then, the U.S. has watched with alarm as Iran pursued nuclear capabilities, largely in secret. The Natanz site has been a focal point of that concern. In the early 2000s, it was revealed as part of a covert network of nuclear sites that Iran had failed to disclose to international inspectors. Iran has insisted that its nuclear program is peaceful, aimed at energy production and medical research. It is also a party to the UN's Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which obliges members not to develop nuclear weapons. But international watchdogs have warned about the country's enrichment of uranium to levels far beyond civilian use and its concealment of key facilities. Tensions escalated when President Donald Trump in 2018 pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal reached under President Barack Obama, an agreement that rolled back much of Iran's enrichment activity, capped its uranium stockpile, and subjected its facilities to rigorous international inspections. Trump had called the deal 'a disaster' and instead initiated new sanctions on the regime to cripple its economy. But Iran responded by gradually abandoning the agreement's restrictions and ramping up uranium enrichment. It also removed all of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) equipment that had been installed for surveillance and monitoring. By 2024, Iran had resumed operations at Natanz and Fordow at a pace not seen in over a decade, deploying more advanced centrifuges and enriching uranium to 60-percent—alarmingly close to the 90-percent purity required for a nuclear weapon. Read more: Israel Gets the War It Wanted In recent months, Iranian officials confirmed they were building a third enrichment site, further deepening concerns that Tehran was preparing to take its nuclear program underground and beyond the reach of future diplomacy or attack. 'There are only really three key nuclear facilities [in Iran],' says Jonathan Panikoff, the former deputy national intelligence officer for the Near East at the National Intelligence Council, pointing to Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan. 'If they succeed in destroying those three facilities, it will really set Iran's nuclear program back.' Technically, Iran has not yet built a nuclear weapon. But the infrastructure and know-how are in place, analysts say. Before Israel's strikes, the IAEA found that Iran could enrich enough uranium for a bomb in about a week. That means that in five months, Iran could have had enough for 22 nuclear weapons. However, analysts note that uranium alone isn't enough for a viable nuclear weapon and that it would take additional time to manufacture it. Netanyahu believes that a nuclear-armed Iran is an existential threat, claiming that Iranian leaders have openly called for the end of the Israeli state and have lent support for groups like Hezbollah and Hamas. 'Eighty years ago, Jews were victims of a Holocaust perpetrated by the Nazi regime. Today, the Jewish state refuses to be the victim of a nuclear Holocaust perpetrated by the Iranian regime,' Netanyahu declared on Friday. For Israel, the fear is not just a direct nuclear strike, but that Iran could act more aggressively throughout the region under the protection of a nuclear deterrent. Trump, a strong ally of Israel, has insisted that Iran 'cannot have a nuclear weapon' and framed the moment as a possible 'second chance' for Iran's leadership to quickly reach an agreement on curbing its nuclear program in order to avoid further destruction 'before there is nothing left and save what was once known as the Iranian Empire.' Israel's strikes on Friday marked the first overt attack on Iran's core nuclear infrastructure. While it remains unclear how Iran's nuclear program will ultimately be impacted, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi told the U.N. Security Council on Friday that Natanz, the facility at the heart of Iran's nuclear ambition, was destroyed in the strikes. Other major nuclear sites were not initially hit, though Grossi later noted that 'Iranian authorities are informing us of attacks on two other facilities, namely the Fordow fuel enrichment plant and at Isfahan.' Several high-ranking Iranian military officials were also killed in the strikes, according to state-affiliated media, including six nuclear scientists and security forces tasked with protecting its nuclear sites. But analysts note that Iran still likely retains much of its expertise and equipment. A full dismantling of Iran's nuclear infrastructure would likely require a sustained campaign involving not only air power, but also cyber warfare, intelligence operations, and potentially ground forces. Even so, the deeply buried Fordow site—nearly half a mile inside a mountain—could be beyond the reach of Israel's current munitions. Only the U.S. is believed to possess the most advanced bunker-busting bombs capable of reliably penetrating such sites, says Panikoff. Write to Nik Popli at


Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Over 10K Sign Christian Petition Rebuking 'Immoral and Cruel' Trump Budget
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. As of Friday afternoon, more than 10,000 people have signed a Christian petition condemning President Donald Trump's "big beautiful bill" as an "immoral and cruel" bill. The petition was published May 30 by Faithful America—which on its website calls itself "the largest online community of Christians" whose members "are sick of sitting by quietly while Jesus' message of good news is hijacked by the religious right to serve a hateful political agenda"—blasts Trump's massive financial proposal as anti-Christian. "Trump's proposed budget turns Biblical values upside down. It rewards the wealthiest Americans with tax cuts while brutalizing the most vulnerable with massive cuts to critical social programs," the petition reads. "If it passes, millions of Americans will suffer as a result." Why It Matters While the budget proposal has received its fair share of criticism from Democrats and some Republicans over its impact on social safety net programs and the federal government's deficit, Christians have largely supported Trump during the presidential election. According to the Associated Press, roughly eight in 10 white evangelicals supported him in 2020 and 2024. President Donald Trump delivers remarks before signing a series of bills related to California's vehicle emissions standards during an event in the East Room of the White House on June 12 in Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump delivers remarks before signing a series of bills related to California's vehicle emissions standards during an event in the East Room of the White House on June 12 in Washington, To Know In its petition, Faithful America calls out the Trump-backed House budget proposal: "It is immoral and cruel to deprive people of health care, access to affordable food, and educational opportunities to satisfy a few individuals who have more money than they could spend in a lifetime. Tens of millions of Americans will suffer if this budget advances. This budget is a direct violation of Jesus' teachings to love and care for the poor." Trump's "big beautiful bill" includes permanence for the individual income and estate tax cuts enacted in his first term. It also features new exemptions for tipped income, overtime pay and interest on certain auto loans, designed to target working-class voters. The bill would increase the standard deduction and includes a temporary $500 boost to the child tax credit for tax years 2025 through 2028. But the spending plan also outlines nearly $700 billion in cuts to Medicaid, including new eligibility requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents—a requirement for 80 hours per month of work, education or service. Recipients would also face biannual eligibility verification. Democrats have criticized the proposal, warning of possible increases in premiums and reductions in health care and food assistance for millions. "This budget is the antithesis of Jesus' teachings. It harms millions of Americans while benefiting only the wealthiest in our country," the Rev. Dr. Shannon Fleck, executive director of Faithful America, told Newsweek. "Trump and his followers' rhetoric is not in alignment with the majority of Americans, and it's incumbent on all American Christians who love our neighbors and want a nation made of love and opportunity for all to speak out loudly in opposition to the damaging and harmful proposal." The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the bill would increase the U.S. federal debt by $2.4 trillion from 2025 to 2034, while reducing taxes by $3.75 trillion over the same period. The analysis was released as the bill moved from the House to the Senate for further debate. While some Republicans have voiced concern over debt implications, Trump's allies have argued that the official estimates do not fully account for economic growth they claim will result from the tax cuts. The House of Representatives narrowly passed the bill of more than 1,000 pages by a vote of 215–214, following prolonged negotiations and deep divisions within Republican ranks. All House Democrats and two Republican representatives voted against it. "As Christians, we know that budgets are moral documents," Faithful America wrote on its website. "And the budget reconciliation bill currently making its way through Congress says dire things about what the Trump regime values -- and who it is willing to leave behind." In March, the group also launched a petition against Trump's efforts to dismantle the Department of Education, saying the action corrupted the Christian faith. "It's clear Christian nationalists want to take full advantage of [Trump's efforts]. But forcing Christianity on others doesn't spread our faith, it corrupts it," the prior petition said. Still, three months into Trump's second term, white evangelical protestants were some of his staunchest supporters, according to Pew Research Center think tank, which suggested 72 percent approved of Trump's handling of the presidency. What People Are Saying Fleck also told Newsweek: "There is nothing beautiful about Trump's budget proposal. It's really a big betrayal and yet another example of the Project 2025 agenda: cutting funding that aids vulnerable communities and pitting them against one another while using that money to provide tax cuts for Trump and his billionaire friends to line their own pockets." Alex Beene, financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "One subject continuously discussed in the proposed budget is cuts to important programs that provided services to tens of millions of Americans, many of which voted for the current administration. New requirements could have a dramatic effect on the number of those who qualify, and the loss of healthcare coverage could be devastating, particularly to states which lean heavily on the federal funding these programs provide." What Happens Next The bill is now under debate in the Senate, where Republicans hold a slim majority. Several in the GOP have signaled opposition or uncertainty, citing provisions related to the debt ceiling and deficit spending. Modifications are expected before any final vote. "It's no surprise some religious groups are making moves to attempt to stop the bill's progression and get Congress to reassess some of the proposed cuts," Beene said.