President
Trump and Pope Francis have little in common. One rose to power
championing his wealth and machismo, the other on a platform of humility
and mercy. One wants to build a wall to keep migrants out, and the
other preaches to welcome the stranger. When they meet for the first
time on Wednesday morning in the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace, their
competing visions of greatness will come to a head—with diplomatic and
political consequences.
Trump’s
break with his predecessor, on nearly every issue, has raised questions
about how the U.S. and the Vatican will work together diplomatically
going forward. President Obama and Pope Francis shared a political
vision that pushed forward an historic detente with Cuba, an agreement for global climate conservation, and a commitment to abolishing nuclear weapons. Their unity marked a reversal in recent American politics, where Rome seemed to favor the Democratic economic policy agenda instead of the GOP’s social one.
Already,
behind the scenes, top Vatican officials have expressed concern about
Trump. When Republican Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee visited the Vatican
in February and met with Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin, he
says “there certainly was not a glow” when it came to the new president.
Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia visited the same week. “There was
a great alignment between the things we were trying to do in the world
and the things that the Vatican was trying to do,” Kaine says of the
Obama years. “Now I see more conflict.”
Trump
and Pope Francis have long had a tense relationship. Shortly after Pope
Francis was elected four years ago, Trump tweeted that Francis was not
very “pope-like” and that he didn’t like that Francis paid his own hotel
bill. When Pope Francis visited Mexico during the 2016 U.S. presidential primaries
and said it was “not Christian” to build walls to keep out migrants,
Trump shot back that Francis was “disgraceful.” When Trump was
inaugurated, Pope Francis sent a note promising prayers and asking that
America be known “above all by its concern for the poor, the outcast and
those in need who, like Lazarus, stand before our door.” Last month,
when Francis visited Egypt, he expressed concern that “demagogic forms
of populism” were rising across the globe.
The
Trump Administration’s refugee rhetoric and policy have been a
significant point of tension. Kaine and Pope Francis discussed about the
global refugee crisis for five minutes in Spanish when they met in
February. “He said, I appreciate your support for the kinds of policies
that I am talking about, but I hope you might be able to convince some
who serve with you to see it the same way,” Kaine recounts. “The Vatican
is deeply worried about a mindset that would paint refugees as
terrorists, or refugees as a problem.”
This
leaves the Trump administration looking for new points of unity as they
envision a different relationship with the Vatican. So far, one main
shared interest is fighting human trafficking. Ivanka Trump will visit
the Catholic Community of Sant'Egidio during the visit to Rome, and she
is expected to meet with several female human trafficking victims.
Corker, chair of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, discussed
his End Modern Slavery Initiative with top Vatican officials when he
visited in February, and he has spoken with Trump deputy national
security advisor Dina Powell in advance of Trump’s visit. “I see a
tremendous alignment there,” Corker says. “We have had great meetings
with the Trump team on this, I know it is something that Ivanka herself
is interested in.”
Violence
against religious minorities, especially Christians, in the Middle East
could be another. Trump often made ISIS beheading Christians a talking
point on the campaign trail, and his evangelical supporters like
Franklin Graham have advocated for the issue to be a priority to Trump’s
Washington.
Russia’s
role in defending the Assad regime in Syria could be a hurdle. Putin,
Corker says, “has done a tremendous PR job with the Vatican” making
himself the defender of Christians in the Middle East. “You sit there
going, my gosh,” Corker says. “Even though Putin has helped stoke the
mass refugee crisis that we have in Europe … the narrative there is they
are very upset with the United States over its refugee policy.”
Even
though the appointment of U.S. ambassador to the Holy See was vacant
until Trump nominated Callista Gingrich last week, some diplomatic
efforts have continued. The Holy See has been significantly involved in
brokering political dialogue in Venezuela, and when Under Secretary of
State for Political Affairs Thomas Shannon visited Rome in April, he
thanked Vatican officials for those efforts and discussed the need for
prompt elections and the release of political prisoners, according to a
State department official.
This
Wednesday, Pope Francis has said he plans to listen to Trump despite
their differences. As he told reporters recently when asked about the
trip, “I never make a judgment about a person without hearing him out.”TIME
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