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Pope Francis dead at 88, Vatican says

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Pope Francis, Bishop of Rome and Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church, who worked to instill progressive influences on the global church while maintaining unity with conservatives amid years of turmoil, died Monday morning, Vatican camerlengo Cardinal Kevin Farrell announced. 

He was 88 years old.

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«Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis. At 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His Church,» Farrell announced.

«He taught us to live the values ​​of the Gospel with fidelity, courage and universal love, especially in favor of the poorest and most marginalized. With immense gratitude for his example as a true disciple of the Lord Jesus, we commend the soul of Pope Francis to the infinite merciful love of the One and Triune God.»

U.S. Vice President JD Vance had just met with the pope on Sunday.

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«I just learned of the passing of Pope Francis. My heart goes out to the millions of Christians all over the world who loved him. I was happy to see him yesterday, though he was obviously very ill. But I’ll always remember him for the below homily he gave in the very early days of COVID. It was really quite beautiful. May God rest his soul,» Vance said early Monday morning in a post on X.

Pope Francis meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance and his delegation during an audience at Casa Santa Marta on April 20, 2025, in Vatican City, Vatican. (Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

The pope preached frequently on the Catholic virtues of mercy, kindness and humility. He did not shy away from controversy, and American presidents, including Donald Trump and Joe Biden, were not immune from his views. 

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Less than a month into President Donald Trump’s presidency, the pontiff criticized the Republican’s plans for the mass deportations of migrants, stressing that the forceful removal of people simply for their immigration status deprives them of their inherent dignity and «will end badly.» 

In a strongly worded letter to U.S. Catholic Bishops, the pope appeared to counter remarks made by Vice President JD Vance — who had recently converted to Catholicism — after he suggested Americans should care for family, communities and the country before caring about others. 

«Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups,» the pontiff wrote. «Worrying about personal, community or national identity, apart from these considerations.» 

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POPE FRANCIS EXPOSES CONFIDENTIAL DETAILS ABOUT HIS ELECTION AND RELATIONSHIPS IN LENGTHY INTERVIEW 

Pope Francis in Kazakhstan

Pope Francis meets with bishops, priests, deacons, consecrated persons, seminarians and pastoral workers in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Cathedral in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, on Sept. 15, 2022. (Reuters/Pavel Mikheyev)

Pope Francis in 2015 became the first pontiff to ever address a Joint Meeting of Congress where he spoke on a range of topics including immigration, family, the death penalty, climate change, extremism, religious freedom and the refugee crisis. 

He joined American bishops and urged American leaders to abolish capital punishment and said Congress has a «role to play» in addressing global warming. 

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In 2022 he questioned then President Biden’s conscience on abortion in an interview during which he described the commander-in-chief’s religious identity and views on abortion as incoherent. «A month after conception, the DNA of the fetus is already there and the organs are aligned. There is human life,» the pontiff said in the interview with Spanish-language outlet Univision. 

He also weighed in on candidates Trump and Harris during the election campaign, where he bashed them both, saying, «Both are against life, be it the one who kicks out migrants, or be it the one who kills babies,″ he said, according to the Associated Press. 

Just weeks before President Trump’s second inauguration, he appointed Cardinal Robert McElroy to be the Archbishop of Washington. McElroy had been critical of Trump’s immigration policies during his first term as president. 

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Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in 1936 to Italian immigrant parents in Argentina, Francis made history as the first pope from the Americas — as well as the first Jesuit to hold the office.  

He was elected pope in 2013 after the almost unprecedented retirement of his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.  

Bergolio’s father, Mario, was an accountant for the railway industry, and his mother, Regina, was a homemaker and caregiver for her five children.  

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POPE FRANCIS FUELS NEW SPECULATION ON FUTURE OF PONTIFICATE 

Pope Francis obituary, file image of the dead pontiff

Pope Francis, born as Jorge Mario Bergoglio, is shown here with his family. From left to right, standing, brother Alberto Horacio, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Oscar Adrian and sister Marta Regina, sitting, sister Maria Elena, mother Regina and father Mario Jose Francisco. (API/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

Throughout his early years, the future pope worked a number of menial jobs. He labored briefly in the stocking factory where his father was an accountant before moving on to other opportunities, including jobs as a bar bouncer and janitor.  

He eventually sought a career as a chemical technician, receiving a diploma in chemistry from the secondary school Escuela Técnica Industrial N° 27 Hipólito Yrigoyen. He also worked briefly in a food laboratory. However, his career in chemistry was short-lived. 

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He entered the priesthood at the Diocesan Seminary of Villa Devoto in Argentina. Francis was ordained a priest in 1969 and made his final profession with the Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits, in 1973. The same year, he was appointed as a provincial for the order.  

His appointment as provincial was concurrent with the Dirty War, a period of intense state-led persecution of left-wing leaders and political dissidents. Bergolio experienced constant threats to his own safety as he worked to hide or aid in the escape of government targets, including many Catholic faithful.  

Pope Francis obituary, file image of the dead pontiff

Pope Francis’ is a fan of Argentina’s San Lorenzo Futbol Club. (API/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)

During that time, two Jesuit priests under his supervision were disappeared by the government, drugged and left barely alive in a field five months after their kidnapping. Pope Francis has said he was forced to negotiate with the regime for their release.  

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Bergolio would spend the next two decades bouncing from position to position at the direction of his superiors. He served as a professor of theology, seminary instructor, rector, doctoral student and parish priest.  

In 1992, Pope John Paul II appointed Bergolio as titular Bishop of Auca and as an auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires. This was done at the request of Cardinal Antonio Quarracino, Archbishop of Buenos Aires, who consecrated him to the episcopacy.  

Bergoglio proved vital to the nation’s Catholic community, and he was quickly raised to the dignity of Coadjutor Archbishop of Buenos Aires, serving alongside Quarracino and taking over the archdiocese entirely after his death the following year.  

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Bergoglio was given the crimson hat of a cardinal by Pope John Paul II in 2001.  

In 2013, after the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI, Bergoglio was elected to the papacy, selecting the pontifical name «Francis» after St. Francis of Assisi — a choice that set the tone for the rest of his papacy.  

POPE DERIDES BIDEN’S ABORTION VIEWS, CATHOLIC SELF-IDENTITY AS ‘INCOHERENCE’

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Pope Francis obituary, file image of the dead pontiff

Newly elected Pope Francis, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina appears on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica after being elected by the conclave of cardinals, at the Vatican on March 13, 2013. White smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel chimney, and the bells of St. Peter’s Basilica rang out, signaling at the time that the Roman Catholic cardinals had elected a pope to succeed Benedict XVI. (Tony Gentile/Reuters)

Pope Francis’s teachings as a priest, bishop, cardinal and pope were deeply influenced by his Jesuit vocation — viewing each person as a unique creation of God, with whom they can have a personal relationship. His ministry and leadership were committed to keeping doors open and making the church approachable to the public.  

It was not only American politics that he had strong opinions of. 

He faced criticism for specific remarks he made against Israel’s military operation in Gaza, calling the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian enclave «very serious and shameful.» During that same speech, he condemned the growth of antisemitism throughout the world, Reuters reported. He also called for an end to the war in Ukraine and expressed concerns over climate change.

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In 2023, seemingly looking to strike a balance, he formally allowed Catholic priests to give same-sex couples a blessing, which was seen as being a radical shift in church policy, the Associated Press reported at the time.   

Pope Francis is also remembered for living a life of intense simplicity, denying himself a lavish papal apartment in the Vatican upon his election, and opting instead for a two-room suite in the Domus Santa Marta, a residence built by Pope John Paul II.  

Pope Francis washes the feet of a prisoner

Pope Francis celebrates the traditional rite of the washing of feet at the Casal del Marmo juvenile penitentiary on April 6, 2023, in Rome, Italy. On Holy Thursday, Pope Francis went to the outskirts of Rome to celebrate the Mass of the Lord’s Supper at the Casal del Marmo juvenile penitentiary, where he carried out the traditional rite of the washing of the feet of twelve of the young people there. (Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

In contrast to his immediate predecessors, Pope Francis eschewed ornate robes or luxurious clothing. His outfit rarely consisted of more than a plain, white cassock tied with a papal fascia.  

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Pope Francis even dressed down his Ring of the Fisherman — a piece of gold jewelry worn by popes to signify their office — by having it made with silver and only wearing it for ceremonies.  

Francis’s tenure continued the ongoing efforts to investigate decades of sexual abuse claims against priests across the world, including in the United States, with Francis vowing transparency in 2019. 

«Transparency is now being implemented at the highest level,» said Archbishop Charles Scicluna, the Archbishop of Malta and Adjunct Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, after Francis gave legal authorities access to documents about sexual abuse cases and abolished the «pontifical secret» of the cases.  

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POPE FRANCIS DEFROCKS NOTORIOUS BISHOP WHO CONFESSED TO ABUSING HIS NEPHEW 

Pope Francis obituary, file image of the dead pontiff

Pope Francis meets President Donald Trump during his first term in the Private Library of the Apostolic Palace with his wife, Melania, his daughter, Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner.  (Vatican/Pool/Galazka/Archivio Grzegorz Galazka/Mondadori via Getty Images)

He continued Benedict’s work to root malicious clerics out of the Church hierarchy «with the wrath of God,» appointing task forces and establishing victim aid groups.  

Pope Francis proved frustrating for a wide variety of conservatives, liberals, traditionalists and progressives. 

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His gentle — at times vague and confusing — language on key social issues, such as sexuality and divorce, frustrated conservatives hoping for a more aggressive champion of Catholic moral teaching. 

In July 2017, a group of Catholic clergy and academics sent Pope Francis a «Filial Correction» document alleging seven serious theological mistakes made by the pontiff in public statements. The document’s assertions proved controversial within the Catholic Church and the document was never explicitly addressed.  

Conversely, his refusal to back down from traditional church teachings on abortion, gay marriage, women’s ordination and priestly celibacy frustrated progressives hoping for a more modern church.  

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Echoing his time as a prelate in Argentina, Pope Francis was at times criticized from both sides of the aisle for his heavy hand enforcing Catholic unity on national and international levels.  

Traditionalists voiced intense opposition to his apostolic letter «Traditionis custodes,» which restricted the celebration of the traditional Latin mass in an attempt to squash increasingly separatist conservative movements within the Church.  

Biden with Pope Francis

Pope Francis meets with then-President Joe Biden during an audience at the Apostolic Palace on Oct. 29, 2021 in Vatican City.  (Vatican Media via Vatican Pool)

He similarly shut down discussion of many social issues that progressives have sought to reform.  

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In 2019, Pope Francis told a nun asking him to approve the ordination of women that «if the Lord didn’t want a sacramental ministry for women, it can’t go forward,» adding, «We are Catholics, but if anyone wants to found another church they are free [to do so].»  

The hyper-progressive leadership of the Catholic Church in Germany was a target of his ire after the country’s clerical leaders attempted an upheaval of traditional teachings regarding gender and sexuality. The Vatican issued a series of letters, approved by Pope Francis, accusing the German church of risking separation from the Catholic Communion.  

The conflict with German bishops encapsulated his papacy’s recurring themes of authority and unity, best exemplified in a passage from his «Letter to the Pilgrim People of God in Germany.»  

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POPE FRANCIS URGES CATHOLIC VOTERS TO ‘CHOOSE THE LESSER EVIL’ BETWEEN TRUMP AND HARRIS

Pope Francis delivers his speech during the Holy Mass with

Pope Francis delivers a speech during the Holy Mass with newly appointed Cardinals.  (Stefano Costantino/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

In the letter, Pope Francis wrote, «The universal Church lives in and of the particular Churches, just as the particular Churches live and flourish in and from the universal Church. If they find themselves separated from the entire ecclesial body, they weaken, rot and die. Hence, the need always to ensure that communion with the whole body of the Church is alive and effective.»  

Pope Francis visited dozens of countries, including the United States and Cuba in 2015, and went as far afield as Papua New Guinea, as well as visits to predominantly Muslim countries including Egypt, Morocco and Jordan. 

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Pope Francis struggled with health complications throughout his reign.  

The pontiff dealt for many years with sciatica, a nerve condition that caused immense pain in his leg and at times hindered his ability to walk.  

In 2021, Pope Francis was hospitalized for an intestinal surgery that removed 13 inches of his colon. 

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In March 2023, Francis was again taken to the hospital after experiencing intense chest pain and difficulty breathing. He was treated for a respiratory infection and released after antibiotic treatment. 

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Pope Francis Travels To Mongolia

Pope Francis is welcomed as he arrives at the Apostolic Prefecture on Sept. 1, 2023 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. According to the Vatican, the trip was Pope Francis’s 43rd Apostolic Journey abroad and the 61st country he visited as Pope.  (Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images)

In June of the same year, the pope was brought back for another abdominal surgery to repair an incisional hernia. He was released after making a full recovery.  

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He took a fall at his residence and suffered a contusion on his right arm in January 2025.   

In February, he was once again hospitalized after a bout of bronchitis.  

Following Pope Francis’ death, the Vatican has entered a time of sede vacante — in English, «empty seat.»  

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The Associated Press, Reuters and Fox News’ Annie Butterworth contributed to this report. 


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Fox News Politics Newsletter: Trump DHS Nixes Harvard’s Student Visas

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Welcome to the Fox News Politics newsletter, with the latest updates on the Trump administration, Capitol Hill and more Fox News politics content.  Here’s what’s happening…

  • House GOP leadership takes victory lap after passing Trump’s ‘one big, beautiful bill’
  • ‘Security incident’ reported outside CIA headquarters
  • New book reveals Biden’s inner circle worried about his age years before botched debate performance

Noem Nixes Harvard Visas

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is eliminating the student visa program at Harvard University due to «pro-terrorist conduct» at campus protests, Fox News Digital has learned. 

It’s a severe consequence for what DHS claims is Harvard’s refusal to comply with its requests for behavioral records of student visa holders. 

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«This administration is holding Harvard accountable for fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus,» said DHS Secretary Kristi Noem. «It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments. Harvard had plenty of opportunity to do the right thing. It refused. They have lost their Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification as a result of their failure to adhere to the law. Let this serve as a warning to all universities and academic institutions across the country.»…READ MORE

Sec. Kristi Noem and Harvard protests (Reuters)

White House

GRADING TRUMP: Trump’s 2nd-term approval ratings dip despite border security gains

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YOU’RE NOT FIRED: Federal judge blocks Trump admin moves to dismantle Dept of Education

WHITE HOUSE WHITEWASH: New book exposes how top Biden comms staffer was ‘tip of the spear’ covering up Biden’s cognitive decline

WORLD CLASS: First lady embarks on ‘new frontier’ in publishing with audiobook of memoir

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World Stage

FOREIGN TAKEOVER: New law would stop foreign adversaries from ‘buying up our country’ while Americans can’t afford homes

HERE TO HELP: Red Cross fighting to reach hostages, alleviate ‘catastrophic’ situation in Gaza

‘CHEATED’ AMERICA: Republicans look to stop China’s ‘backdoor’ tariff-dodging scheme

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Will the tariff truce with China give President Donald Trump a political bounce? (Fox News)

Capitol Hill

‘A PRICE TO PAY’: Democrats predict passing Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ will cost many Republicans their seats

BIG BILL, BIGGER DRAMA: Winners, losers, and grab-bags from House GOP’s narrow passage of ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’

‘I’M GOING TO GO’: Ilhan Omar refuses to answer reporter questions on fatal shooting of Israeli Embassy workers

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Deputy Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) speaks during a news conference on possible government shutdown at the U.S. Capitol on September 20, 2023 in Washington, DC (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

NANCY VS NANCY: Mace sounds off on stock trading in Congress, Pelosi remains silent: ‘Something doesn’t add up’

BORDER BOLSTER: Bipartisan Senate bill targets border human, drug trafficking with innovative technology

Across America 

‘EVIL OF ANTISEMITISM’: White House decries ‘evil of antisemitism,’ vows justice after fatal shooting of Israeli embassy staffers

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NEW TACTIC: ICE begins new, nationwide effort to arrest illegal aliens at immigration hearings

SICKEST GENERATION: RFK Jr.’s highly-anticipated MAHA report paints dismal state of child health, national security concerns

SPLIT DECISION: Supreme Court upholds Oklahoma decision, in blow to religious charter schools

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This split image shows the US Supreme Court justices and a school choice protester (SCOTUS/Getty )

‘DID THIS FOR GAZA’: Who is the suspect in the killing of 2 Israeli embassy staffers?

HISTORY OF TERROR: Gunman kills Israeli embassy couple in Washington, following decades of embassy-targeted attacks

TERROR AT HOME: Antisemitic shooting of Israeli diplomats adds to alarming rise in domestic terrorism

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ENFORCEMENT FIRST: This state just became the latest in the country to ban sanctuary cities

Get the latest updates on the Trump administration and Congress, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.

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La ofensiva de Donald Trump contra los extranjeros en Harvard: qué pasará con los argentinos que están estudiando en la Universidad

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La Universidad de Harvard es el mayor referente global en educación y la meca de la mayoría de los estudiantes del mundo y para los argentinos no es una excepción. En esa casa de estudios hay en este momento 58 alumnos e investigadores del país que transitan los antiguos edificios de Boston y que podrían ser afectados por las nuevas políticas del gobierno de Donald Trump, al ser canceladas sus visas.

Buena parte de ellos cursan maestrías en la facultad de Negocios, en la Kennedy de políticas públicas, otros en la Escuela de Artes y Ciencias otros en la de Derecho. Y algunos pocos (4) en Harvard College, que es para alumnos que comienzan su carrera universitaria.

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Del total de 58 hay 34 alumnos de college y maestrías y 24 scholars, que son investigadores que residen por algún período en la universidad para hacer algún trabajo específico, según el sitio de Harvard.

Todos han tenido que superar duros obstáculos para llegar a esas aulas: más allá de haber sido muy destacados alumnos en la Argentina, han tenido que rendir exámenes específicos, de idioma y sortear un proceso de admisión muy exigente que incluye ensayos, cartas de recomendación y entrevistas en inglés.

El porcentaje de admisión de Harvard es el más bajo de todas las universidades de los Estados Unidos. Este año solo fue aceptado un 3,4% de los que se postularon.

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Los alumnos vienen de 140 países de todo el planeta. Muchos de ellos reciben ayuda financiera para poder cursar. La diversidad geográfica y cultural es uno de los valores que defiende la Universidad, pero ahora los estudiantes internacionales sufren un período de incertidumbre.

Un ejemplo es la santiagueña Nayeli Cardozo, una joven de 18 que fue becada y que pudo cumplir su sueño de estudiar en Harvard. Hija de una maestra y un remisero, estudió en la secundaria Manuel Belgrano de Santiago del Estero y luego de aplicar a 13 universidades en EE.UU. fue aceptada en la que más quería para estudiar Psicología y Economía.

Otro es Federico Repetto, de San Justo, Santa Fe, que se recibió en la Universidad Favaloro con medalla de oro y fue aceptado el año pasado como residente en la red de hospitales de Harvard.

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Se estima que son unos 700 los argentinos que han pasado por sus aulas, entre ellos el actual embajador en EE.UU. Alec Oxenford, que estudió un máster en administración de empresas, al igual que su antecesor Fernando Oris de Roa, que había cursado un master en políticas públicas.

También cursaron allí Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, Federico Sturzenegger, Juan Carlos De Pablo, Domingo Cavallo y su hija Sonia, entre otros. En Buenos Aires se fundó un Harvard Club of Argentina, que nuclea a buena parte de los egresados del país.

En algunos grupos de chat de ex alumnos estaban conmocionados con la medida anunciada este jueves. Si bien ellos no son los que sufrirán las consecuencias de la decisión del gobierno republicano, estaban conmocionados por el golpe que significaría para su “alma mater”.

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“Estamos en shock”, dijo a Clarín una argentina egresada de esa universidad. “Hay un enorme beneficio en tener una comunidad diversa e internacional y perder eso es demasiado”. Pero tenían esperanzas de que el tema pueda arreglarse. “Creo que Harvard tiene el músculo para responder y para llevar el tema a la justicia”, dijo.

Varios de los ex alumnos han firmado en contra de los ataques antisemitas en el campus donde ha estudiado y están en contra de la “militancia paga a favor de Gaza”. “Pero una cosa no quita la otra”, dice la egresada, y afirma que Trump usa ese argumento para intervenir las políticas de la universidad, que es privada.

En esos chats, un egresado europeo se lamentaba por el rumbo que había tomado el país y la pelea con la Universidad. “No estoy seguro de que el Gobierno sepa lo que significa esto. Harvard tiene una red formidable red de alumnos ex presidentes, primeros ministros, un ex secretario general de la ONU, ministros, políticos. Y también en el mundo de los negocios y de las leyes hay graduados”, señaló.

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Y advirtió que “mucha gente nos sentimos atacados, muy furiosos con lo que está haciendo el Gobierno y creo que mucha gente puede tomar revancha”.

Pese a las amenazas, la Universidad promete defender a sus alumnos. El sitio de Harvard informaba de las restricciones de visas y afirmaba que «Harvard se compromete a mantener nuestra capacidad de recibir a nuestros estudiantes y académicos internacionales, que provienen de más de 140 países y enriquecen a la Universidad y a esta nación».

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Alex Soros blasted for condemning shooting of Israelis while funding anti-Israel groups

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Far-left progressive billionaire Alex Soros is being slammed online for his statement condemning the killing of two Israeli embassy staffers despite funding anti-Israel groups through his Open Society Foundation (OSF).

Soros, who is the son and heir to George Soros’ fortune and philanthropic empire, condemned the killings in an X post, saying «the murder of Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky at the Capital Jewish Museum was evil in its most basic form» and that «this brutal antisemitic act must be condemned in the strongest terms.»

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Milgrim and Lischinsky, two Israeli Embassy staffers who were set to be engaged, were killed outside an event at the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday night.

D.C. police identified the suspect as 31-year-old Elias Rodriguez, who was taken into custody after the shooting attack. He was allegedly seen pacing outside the museum before he approached a group of four people, including the two victims, and opened fire. Rodriguez then reportedly went into the museum, where he was detained by security. He allegedly shouted «Free, free Palestine!» while in custody.

OMAR WALKS AWAY FROM REPORTERS ASKING ABOUT ISRAELI EMBASSY STAFFERS KILLED IN DC

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Far left progressive billionaire Alex Soros is being slammed online for his statement condemning the killing of two Israeli embassy staffers despite funding anti-Israel groups through his Open Society Foundation (OSF).

Though Soros condemned the killings, his statement was flooded with replies calling out his funding of radical anti-Israel groups that foment anti-Jewish sentiments.

«Alex, you and your father created this problem through the ruthless and international silencing of critics to open borders policies,» said one X user named Joseph Janecka. «Their blood is on your hands as much as their murderers. We will never forget.»

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Carl Wheless, another user, commented, «You are behind the hate, so excuse us if you don’t wish to hear from you on the matter.»

Another, Eitan Fischberger, asserted that Soros «funds the revolutionary Marxist group the shooter belonged to.»

YOUNG COUPLE FATALLY SHOT OUTSIDE JEWISH EVENT IN DC WERE ABOUT TO GET ENGAGED

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Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim

Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim who were shot and killed as they left an event at the Capital Jewish Museum, pose for a picture at an unknown location, in this handout image released by Embassy of Israel to the U.S. on May 22, 2025. Embassy of Israel to the USA via X/Handout via REUTERS (Embassy of Israel to the USA via X/Handout via REUTERS)

Though the details of Rodriguez’s affiliations are currently unclear as chair of OSF, Soros has helped to fund several leftist groups that have accused Israel of genocide and called for the end of the Jewish state.

In 2023, Israel’s minister of diaspora affairs and social equality, Amichai Chikli, told Fox News Digital that Soros is a mirror image of father George’s anti-Israel agenda.

When asked if Soros would continue to fund anti-Israel entities that bash the Jewish state, Chikli said it «looks like the son is a replica of his father. We have no expectation that his son will be a big Zionist.»

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Chikli added that OSF funds Human Rights Watch, which he said, «is attacking Israelis heavily and attacking Israel as an apartheid state and delegitimizing and demonizing Israel.»

PIRRO ANNOUNCES MURDER CHARGES AGAINST ALLEGED DC SHOOTER: ‘ANTISEMITISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED’

Anti-Israel protesters gather near Washington Square Park in New York City

Anti-Israel protesters wave Palestinian flags in Washington Square Park in New York City on Friday, May 3, 2024. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

He also said OSF funds «J Street,» an organization that claims to be pro-Israel but has faced criticism because of its support for positions that allegedly favor Iran’s regime and the Palestinians.

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Chikli also noted that the Soros foundation «gives money to radical small Palestinian organizations in Israel that describe Israel as a colonial state and a moral sin.» He cited the NGO Adalah, which means «justice» in Arabic, as an organization «denying the vision of Israel as a Jewish state» in its «published vision for Arab society in Israel.»

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The elder Soros has also faced intense criticism from Israel’s ambassador to the U.N. for pumping over $15 million into a network of nongovernmental organizations that allegedly support Hamas. 

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«George Soros’ donations to organizations that seek the destruction of the State of Israel as a Jewish state is shameful. However, I am not surprised,» Israeli ambassador Gilad Erdan told Fox News Digital in December 2023.

«For years, Soros has backed and transferred money to organizations supporting BDS that want to isolate Israel,» added Erdan, who has been leading the diplomatic campaign at the U.N. to spell out Hamas’ crimes against humanity. «They have never been about real peace or any solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.»

Fox News Digital’s Benjamin Weinthal, Greg Norman, Rachel Wolf and Trey Yingst contributed to this report.

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Antisemitism Exposed,Israel,Hate Crime,George Soros

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