logo
Black smoke confirms no pope elected in first conclave voting round

Black smoke confirms no pope elected in first conclave voting round

BreakingNews.ie07-05-2025
The wait for a new pope goes on after black smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel following the first secret vote as the conclave began.
A group of 133 cardinal electors began their behind-closed-doors meeting on Wednesday afternoon.
Advertisement
It is expected voting will resume on Thursday, and up to four rounds of voting can take place each day, two in the morning and two in the afternoon.
The chimney of the Sistine Chapel is where white or black smoke will be emitted, indicating whether or not a pope has been elected. Photo: Andrew Medichini/AP.
Cardinals, mostly dressed in distinctive bright red vestments, heard at a special mass on Wednesday of the 'choice of exceptional importance' they must make in electing the 267th pope.
A new pope requires a two-thirds majority in the voting, and white smoke will be emitted from the specially erected chimney of the Sistine Chapel to confirm a pontiff has been chosen.
There are three UK cardinals taking part in the conclave, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe and Rome-based Cardinal Arthur Roche.
Advertisement
Cardinal Vincent Nichols is among those entering the secret conclave meeting (James Manning/PA)
Cardinal Kevin Farrell, who is Irish-born, is seen as an American cardinal having ministered mainly in the US.
Cardinal Nichols had called on people to pray for himself and other cardinals as they embark on the secret voting process, adding that he feels 'quite intimidated' knowing the world is watching to see who they choose.
The voting cardinals, those aged under 80 who are the only ones eligible to cast a ballot, were urged to 'invoke the help of the Holy Spirit' to help them elect a pope 'whom the (Catholic) Church and humanity need at this difficult and complex turning point in history'.
Addressing them in St Peter's Basilica, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re said: 'To pray, by invoking the Holy Spirit, is the only right and proper attitude to take as the cardinal electors prepare to undertake an act of the highest human and ecclesial responsibility and to make a choice of exceptional importance.
Advertisement
'This is a human act for which every personal consideration must be set aside, keeping in mind and heart only the God of Jesus Christ and the good of the Church and of humanity.'
The pontiff – believed to be someone called to be the successor to St Peter, who was the first pope – will need to be a person who can 'awaken the consciences of all and the moral and spiritual energies in today's society, characterised by great technological progress but which tends to forget God', Cardinal Battista Re added.
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re celebrates a final mass with cardinals inside St Peter's Basilica before the conclave to elect a new pope (Gregorio Borgia/AP)
Following a centuries-old tradition, cardinals are cut off from all communications with the outside world while they take part in the anonymous voting process.
In a livestream from the Sistine Chapel, the electors could each be seen taking an oath pledging secrecy on their vote and what happens at conclave.
Advertisement
At around 4.45pm UK time, a Vatican official declared 'extra omnes', the Latin phrase telling non-cardinals to leave, with the large brown doors of the chapel shut shortly after.
The livestream cut to crowds in St Peter's Square in front of St Peter's Basilica, some of whom waved when they spotted they were on camera.
This conclave is thought to be one of the most diverse of any meeting of cardinals before, representing some 70 countries and hailing from places such as Mongolia, Sweden and Tonga which had not had a cardinal before.
Pope Francis had appointed some 108 of the 133 cardinals who will choose his successor.
Advertisement
The next pope must be someone who can bring together disparate groups within the Catholic Church, an emeritus professor of Catholic theology at the University of Bristol said.
Professor Gavin D'Costa said: 'This conclave is more universal in representative terms than any other in the history of the Church, even if it is also lacking in balance – having more European cardinals than any other single group, but with a dwindling Catholic population in Europe.
'The priority will be to select a pope who embodies the common good, who can unite disparate groups within Catholics, and provide a vision of the Church that can be conducive to peace, co-operation and justice in a broken world.'
Pope Francis was dubbed the people's pope. Photo: Jeff Moore/PA.
Francis was vocal on politics, speaking out against war and climate change, as he urged more focus on the poor and downtrodden of the world.
His funeral last month drew hundreds of thousands of mourners, including world leaders such as US President Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
Such was Francis's popularity, he was dubbed by many to have been 'the people's pope'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

JD Vance reveals his favorite meme of himself is extremely x-rated
JD Vance reveals his favorite meme of himself is extremely x-rated

The Independent

time12 hours ago

  • The Independent

JD Vance reveals his favorite meme of himself is extremely x-rated

JD Vance has revealed that his favourite meme of himself is 'very inappropriate' but 'very funny'. Appearing on The Katie Miller Podcast on Monday (11 August), the US vice president said the meme he likes the most began circulating after the Pope died. The meme in question features the Pope, Vance's wife Usha, and a couch. A fake passage from Vance's memoir Hillbilly Elegy about having sex with a couch when he was younger circulated during the 2024 election cycle. The meme suggested that if these were Vance's options for the game of "F***, Marry, Kill," then the he would marry Usha, kill the Pope, and f*** the couch. He said the meme was 'pretty good', adding that he hoped someone who was right wing thought of it.

Meloni has proven that cutting taxes works. If only Reeves was taking notes
Meloni has proven that cutting taxes works. If only Reeves was taking notes

Telegraph

time13 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Meloni has proven that cutting taxes works. If only Reeves was taking notes

Not only do Italians enjoy better food, warmer weather and la dolce vita, they're now richer than us too. Adjusted for the cost of living, Italy's GDP per capita has overtaken the Britain's for the first time this century, according to the World Bank. Though the gap in living standards is small – the Italians and the British both have GDP per capita of just over $60,000 (£44,000) – the symbolism is huge. Back in 1987, when Italy's economy briefly overtook the UK's in size for the first time, the news prompted an outpouring of patriotic sentiment and became known as il sorpasso – 'the surpassing'. It hasn't always been plain sailing for our Mediterranean rivals. After 1945, Italy's weak coalitions became a byword for political instability. For decades, the country has struggled with demographic decline and fiscal debt crises. In 2011 there was national humiliation when the then prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, was effectively removed from office by Brussels, which threatened to force Italy out of the eurozone. Today, however, Italy seems to have achieved an enviable stability. Under Giorgia Meloni's tough-minded conservative leadership, Italy is now among the most desirable domiciles in Europe, not least for millionaires fleeing the Labour Government's tax raids.

‘Stop Killing Children' banner displayed by Uefa ahead of PSG vs Spurs in Super Cup
‘Stop Killing Children' banner displayed by Uefa ahead of PSG vs Spurs in Super Cup

The Independent

time17 hours ago

  • The Independent

‘Stop Killing Children' banner displayed by Uefa ahead of PSG vs Spurs in Super Cup

Uefa contradicted its own rules on promoting political messages in football matches by displaying a giant 'Stop Killing Children, Stop Killing Civilians' banner on the pitch before Tottenham and Paris Saint-Germain's Super Cup clash. The banner was placed in front of the players as they lined up ahead of kick-off at the Stadio Friuli in Udine. Europe's governing body does not allow political messages to be shown in stadiums before, during or after matches, as per its own rulebook. They nevertheless chose to make this statement but did not name a specific war in the display, involving children from conflict zones in Afghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria, Palestine and Ukraine involved in the opening ceremony. Two refugee children from Gaza later joining Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin in the medal ceremony. One of the children was Tala, 12, described by Uefa as 'a young Palestinian girl with fragile health who was transferred to Milan to receive appropriate medical care, as the adequate equipment was lacking in Gaza after the start of the war'. Nine-year-old boy Mohamed was the other child involved in the ceremony, who lost his parents in an air strike in Gaza. It comes after Uefa came under fire from Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah over a tribute towards late Palestinian forward Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the 'Palestinian Pele', that didn't acknowledge that he was killed in an Israeli attack. The Palestine Football Association (PFA) said that Al-Obeid, 41, was killed by an Israeli strike targeting civilians waiting for humanitarian aid in the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday. Salah quoted the tribute on X and added: 'Can you tell us how he died, where, and why?' The post currently sits on 1.5m likes and 397,000 retweets, as of the time of writing. The PFA said on Saturday that 325 players, coaches, administrators, referees and club board members in the Palestinian soccer community have died in the Israeli- Hamas conflict since October 2023.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store