


Leo XIV will pose some tricky problems for Giorgia Meloni
The newly enthroned pope has criticised the MAGA bigwigs whom the Italian leader supports
FROM TIME to time, Charlemagne comes face to face with a pope. The first occasion was in the year 800 when Leo III placed a crown on his head and proclaimed him emperor of a reborn Roman Empire. More recently, it has become a ritual for a new pope—the latest is another Leo—to thank the scribes who have covered his election, this time including your columnist. Since 2005 the death of a pope has also been marked by a new ritual. Barely is the poor man’s body cold than articles appear in Italian newspapers arguing that the chances have never been better of a return to normality (John Paul II had been the first non-Italian pope for 455 years) and predicting that the next pope will be an Italian. When lists are published of cardinals deemed papabile (literally, pope-able), half or more are invariably Italians. Non-Italian commentators, who assume their Italian counterparts have an inside track, repeat these names until, by the time the cardinals are locked into the Sistine Chapel, it has become a near-certainty they will choose an Italian. It happened again this time. The odds on Pietro Parolin becoming pope had shrunk to 6 to 4 on; but it was an American who emerged onto the balcony of St Peter’s.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Meeting the pope”

Germany’s border controls are annoying the neighbours
Especially the Poles

Why so much is riding on Poland’s presidential elections
Watch what happens in Warsaw

Europe’s attempts to police speech test its liberal credentials
It’s becoming dangerous to anger minority groups and politicians
Peace talks are starting in Istanbul, but who will be there?
Vladimir Putin seems to have developed cold feet
Uncertainty and tension ahead of possible Ukraine peace talks
Vladimir Putin has successfully divided Europe and America—again
Ukraine’s European backers challenge Putin to commit to a 30-day ceasefire
Their gambit is as much a test for Donald Trump as the Kremlin