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The Pope is dead, long live the PM - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Our ninth prime minister since independence was elected on April 28. It is the remarkable second coming of our first and only female prime minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, whose UNC party conducted an excellent marketing campaign to oust the PNM. Fortunately for her, the slick and unorthodox succession planning method employed by Dr Rowley to ensure the leadership of his protégé, Stuart Young, didn't save their party.

Fortunately for us, the elections came fast and the results too, leaving little time for mischief-making. The Roman Catholic community worldwide, alas, cannot conduct polls to forecast who the next pope will be. They must wait perhaps another week to know who will assume the papacy after the death on Easter Monday of Pope Francis, the first Jesuit, first Latin American and person from the global south to be Holy Father.

Pope Francis became a most beloved spiritual leader of our time among Catholics, other faithfuls and even non-believers. His simplicity, humility and seemingly genuine pleasure when among his flock touched people. His championing of the needy, disadvantaged and marginalised felt like the right leadership for this time. His calls for environmental protection, peace in Palestine and Ukraine were on point. He also won admiration, not necessarily from the Vatican bureaucracy, for his persistence in attempting to bring the Holy See's financial management into the 21st century and balance the budget.

His championing of justice for migrants stood in direct opposition to the often inhumane anti-immigrant policies of most governments, while his daily rejection of the opulence and trappings of the papacy won hearts. Francis did not change the church's stance on an all-male clergy though he promoted women to previously male-only positions in the Vatican administration. Nor did he change reproductive or transgender teaching but he empathised, and without causing a revolution he changed the papacy's style from authoritarian and top down, to collegial, shifting the power to the periphery.

In an intuitive bout of cinema programming last weekend, MovieTowne offered special screenings of Conclave, the film that garnered a number of nominations in the 2025 Oscars. It depicts the intrigue of the cardinals in a fictitious conclave - the meeting of dozens of them to choose the next pope.

Some time this week in Rome a real papal conclave will take place. Cardinals from around the world will be sequestered in a room to vote in a series of rounds until a precise majority determines who the new pope is. Behind the scenes, an ideological battle will probably take place over the future path of the Catholic Church. Will Francis's belief that the church is about people, and less about doctrine win over the conservatives who may wish to return to a more hierarchical and conventional modus operandi?

It depends on who is chosen. The number of Catholics is dwindling in Europe, while the largest congregations are in Latin America, Asia and Africa. Pressure is growing for the papacy to reflect that reality

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