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Who is the Democratic gubernatorial candidate arrested for trespassing at an ICE detention center?

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Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, who was arrested on Friday for trespassing at an ICE holding facility, is known as a far-left progressive who has a record of associating with controversial celebrities. 

Baraka, who is currently one of the top Democratic candidates for New Jersey governor, was arrested by Homeland Security personnel outside the Delaney Hall ICE detention center for his involvement in what the DHS called a «beyond bizarre political stunt.» 

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The prison currently holds alleged killers, MS-13 gang members and accused child rapists, among other criminal offenders.

U.S. Attorney for New Jersey Alina Habba announced that Baraka, one of the leading Democratic candidates for New Jersey governor, was arrested on Friday for his involvement in the incident.

«The Mayor of Newark, Ras Baraka, committed trespass and ignored multiple warnings from Homeland Security Investigations to remove himself from the ICE detention center in Newark, New Jersey this afternoon,» said Habba. «He has willingly chosen to disregard the law. That will not stand in this state. He has been taken into custody. NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW.»

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NEWARK MAYOR TAKES FIGHT TO THE GATES OF ICE DETENTION CENTER AMID LEGAL BATTLE OVER ALLEGED SAFETY VIOLATIONS

Top Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ras Baraka was arrested on Friday for trespassing at an ICE holding facility in Newark during a protest. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig | Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

According to Baraka’s campaign website, if elected governor he envisions working to «deconstruct the state budget and reassemble with equity as our north star; judging every decision as either a step towards equity or a step towards inequity.»  

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Besides pushing these controversial «equity» policies, Baraka has been criticized for having a record of associating with questionable characters, including Sean «P. Diddy» Combs and radical antisemitic preacher Louis Farrakhan. 

When he was first running for mayor in 2014, Baraka was endorsed by P. Diddy. He posted about the endorsement on Facebook and in 2015 posted another picture of himself with the former rapper, saying, «great to see see you [P. Diddy] … you’re welcome here anytime!» 

Baraka has also been caught on video applauding and embracing Farrakhan after an address in which the Nation of Islam preacher called White people «demons» and encouraged violence as retribution.

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The video – taken in 2004 at a Newark church – shows Baraka introducing Farrakhan to the congregation by calling him a major personal inspiration and «the leader of every Black person.» 

During the speech, which was first reported on by the New York Post, Baraka stood to give Farrakhan a standing ovation two times. The first is after Farrakhan denounces the non-violent protests of the civil rights movement, saying, «We didn’t believe in no non-violence. The cracker hit you on your jaw, you break his neck. That’s the way we think.»

Baraka applauds again after Farrakhan demonizes White people as «the enemy.» 

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DEM CANDIDATE CAUGHT ON CAMERA APPLAUDING NOTORIOUS ANTISEMITE’S VIOLENT RHETORIC: ‘YOU BREAK HIS NECK’

Baraka with Farrakhan

Left: Baraka and Farrakhan embrace after the now gubernatorial candidate introduced the preacher as a «moral authority» at a 2004 address. Right: Baraka (wearing brown sweater) applauds Farrakhan (far left) mid speech. (Nation of Islam website)

Local outlet Insider NJ reported that a spokesperson for Baraka’s campaign confirmed the arrest, saying that he «was arrested and detained by ICE» and that he was being transported to the Homeland Security Investigations Newark field office.

DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News that Reps. Rob Menendez Jr., Bonnie Watson Coleman and LaMonica McIver, all New Jersey Democrats, were also involved in the incident and rushed through the facility’s gates, demanding they be allowed to conduct an «oversight visit.»

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The lawmakers were held up at the first checkpoint.  

Baraka, who has been protesting the facility’s opening for months, was a regular presence at protests outside the building throughout the week.

Baraka has said that using Delaney Hall for processing people in the country illegally goes against state and local law, leading the city to file a lawsuit in the Essex County Superior Court at the end of March.

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NEWARK MAYOR SAYS ICE AGENTS RAIDED ‘WITHOUT WARRANT,’ VIOLATED CONSTITUTION

Congress members at protest

Members of Congress and protestors attempted to enter the Delaney Hall Detention Center in Newark, New Jersey. (X / @RepBonnie)

In a press conference on Monday, Baraka said that GEO Group, the private company running the prison, is «following the pattern of the president of the United States who believes that he can just do what he wants to do and obscure the laws, national and constitutional laws, and they think they can do the same thing in the state of New Jersey and in Newark.»

Commenting on the arrest, New Jersey Sen. Jon Bramnick, a GOP gubernatorial candidate, told Fox News that «it doesn’t really surprise me because he’s been fighting the opening of Delaney Hall since it opened» and that the mayor «wasn’t very pleased with ICE taking over Delaney Hall.»

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Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., who is also a candidate for governor, condemned the arrest, calling it an «absolute outrage.»

Sherill said that Baraka «needs to be released immediately.»

Another Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Steven Fulop, who is mayor of Jersey City, also condemned the arrest, saying, «We’re watching lines get crossed in real time» and that «this is a dangerous precedent.»

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DHS UNLEASHES POSSIBLE MONEY-SAVING MEASURE FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS TO SELF-DEPORT: ‘SAFEST OPTION’

Ras Baraka at lectern in Feb. 2025 speech

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka speaks after the Democratic gubernatorial debate at Rider University in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, on Feb. 2. (AP photo/Mike Catalini)

Meanwhile, Jack Ciattarelli, another GOP candidate for New Jersey governor, called Baraka’s actions a «cheap publicity stunt.»

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«In Newark, the airport is in the midst of an unprecedented & dangerous meltdown, the public schools are failing students & families, and there is crime in the streets every day. And yet its Mayor and leading Democrat candidate for Governor, [Ras Baraka], is busy shilling for illegal Immigrants at an ICE detention center with a cheap publicity stunt. Shameful,» he posted on X.

Fox News Digital’s Louis Casiano and Cameron Arcand and Fox News Channel’s Bill Melugin contributed to this report.

Immigration,Democratic Party,New Jersey,Migrant Crime,Illegal Immigrants,Crime

INTERNACIONAL

El milagro de León XIV en el cónclave: afirman que fue elegido por una avalancha de más de cien votos, que unió a conservadores y progresistas

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El papa León XIV, cardenal Robert Francis Prevost, obtuvo más de cien votos en la cuarta votación, cuando momentos antes parecía muy difícil que lograra el ganador llegar a los 89 necesarios para sumar los dos tercios de los 133 electoras votantes. Es una versión firme de lo que ocurrió en la elección del nuevo Pontífice, que viene de varios lados.

Antes de comenzar los escrutinios, los cardenales se juramentaron uno a uno (se vio por televisión) a no revelar nada de lo que ocurriera en el encierro obligatorio a que se someten en la elección del nuevo Papa. Es una tradición que muchos no cumplen. Esta vez brotaron al regresar las primeras versiones de qué pasó dentro de la Capilla Sixtina.

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Ya ayer hubo algunas filtraciones. Hoy la prensa internacional publica más. Tras dos votaciones con fumata negra, el cardenal Pietro Parolin, favorito en los pronósticos, se dio cuenta que su candidatura era perdedora. De inmediato propuso al candidato que más sonaba: el norteamericano y peruano Robert Prevost había acumulado consenso en la segunda y tercera votación, las de la mañana.

La iniciativa del Secretario de Estado Parolin revolucionó a muchas ánimas terrestres que estaban recibiendo los efluvios del Espíritu Santo, según la convicción católica.

Fue una corrida hacia Prevost. En primer lugar de los cardenales norteamericanos, conservadores y progresistas, El cardenal Robert McElroy, arzobispo metropolitano de Washington, dijo que “un gran movimiento ocurrió en el segundo día dentro del cónclave y no podía ser sino la Gracia de Dios tanto consenso”.

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Según el cardenal Reinhard Mark, la mayoría sintió que soplaba “el espíritu de unidad». Otros creen que la mayoría comprendió que había que elegir sin perder más tiempo. Y así fue.

Ahora que el flamante Papa los ratificó en el cargo hasta nuevo aviso, los jefes de la Curia Romana con Pietro Parolin a la cabeza como Secretario de Estado, el número dos del Papa, están contentos porque uno de ellos es el nuevo Pontífice.

Jorge Bergoglio, de venerada memoria por su heredero León XIV, lo había nombrado “ministro” del dicasterio de los obispos y presidente de la Comisión de América Latina. Un cargo estratégico para un futuro Pontífice. De ahí deben haber llovido votos.

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Los norteamericanos superaron los conflictos internos. Timothy Dolan, arzobispo de Nueva York, lider de los conservadores, y Blaise Cupich, arzobispo de Chicago (lugar de nacimiento del nuevo Papa), el capo de los progresistas, votaron juntos por Prevost.

Los latinoamericanos votaron en masa por el ahora León XIV. También los asiáticos y muchos europeos. Los africanos, todos conservadores, los siguieron. Así se habría logrado el milagro del centenar de votos al nuevo pontífice.

Dicen que en realidad los votos convergieron sobre un compromiso que no descontenta a los cardenales que temían los cambios. Pero que fue recibido como una continuidad por los que levantan las banderas de la Iglesia de la sinodalidad que construyó en sus doce años de pontificado el papa argentino Jorge Bergoglio.

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Como Francisco, el flamante Papa Prevost se expresó varias veces contra la ordenación femenina. Pero que a la vez cree, como Francisco, que la Iglesia debe avanzar en las innovaciones. Y León XIV también había apoyado el nombramiento de tres mujeres en el dicasterio que dirigía, el de los obispos.

El nuevo Papa, además, es un promotor de la sinodalidad de la Iglesia. Sinodo quiere decir caminar juntos y la asamblea de obispos está siendo reforzada en la asamblea sinodal por las mujeres y los laicos, un cambio revolucionario.

León XIV había dicho sobre el papel de los obispos que “no hay que caer en la tentación de vivir separados, aislados, en un palacio. Sobre el futuro de la Iglesia, mantiene la línea del Papa Francisco. En las esas cuestiones de género sexual su visión es similar a la de Jorge Bergoglio.

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El cambio profundo que esgrime el nuevo Papa es la sinodalidad, combatida fieramente por los conservadores. Internado en el hospital Gemelli en febrero, el Papa Francisco firmó la prórroga hasta 2028, del Sínodo de Obispos iniciado hace cuatro años y que debía concluir ahora.

El todavía cardenal Prevost escribió: “Iglesia sinodal, que camina, que busca siempre la paz, la caridad y la vecindad a quien sufre». Significa unir y escuchar a todas las componentes de la Iglesia católica. Obispos, sacerdotes, laicos. También involucrar a las periferias, servir a una Iglesia que represente y valorice a las Iglesias locales, global e unificante. Todo un programa, que ahora quiere realizar como pontífice.

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Why longtime Trump ally and former Republican Gov. Paul LePage is aiming for a political comeback

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LEWISTON, MAINE – EXCLUSIVE – Former two-term Gov. Paul LePage of Maine says President Donald Trump is a major reason why he’s coming out of political retirement at age 76 – and he’s eyeing a campaign comeback.

«I never, ever had any aspirations to go to Washington until now,» LePage said this week in his first national interview after launching his bid for the House in Maine’s Second Congressional District, which is a top swing seat the GOP aims to flip in the 2026 midterm elections.

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The contest will likely be one of the most closely watched House races in the country next year as the Republicans aim to hold their fragile majority in the chamber.

«Donald Trump, I think, is doing what is necessary in addressing the debt this country is facing. And I think that’s a big, big thing for me,» LePage said as he was interviewed in the Maine city where he was born and raised.

HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN CHAIR SPELLS OUT HIS PLAYBOOK TO HOLD THE CONGRESSIONAL MAJORITY

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Former Republican Gov. Paul LePage, who is running for the House in 2026 in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District, speaks with Fox News Digital in Lewiston, Maine, on May 7, 2025, in his first interview after announcing his candidacy.  (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

LePage highlighted, «I have a friend in the White House right now. I know President Trump. I think I can have an audience of President Trump. I know several of his secretaries very well. And so I think this is a good time. It’s a good time for me to go help.»

LePage – the brash and blunt politician who won over blue-collar workers struggling with economic woes, which helped the Republican businessman win election and re-election in the blue-leaning state – was one of the first major GOP elected officials to endorse Trump when the president first ran for the White House nearly a decade ago.

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«I was Donald Trump before Donald Trump became popular,» LePage joked at the time, in a line that’s since become famous.

The conservative governor, who grabbed national attention with controversial comments made during his tenure, briefly moved with his wife, Ann, to Florida after finishing his second term in 2019.

«I am done with politics. I have done my eight years. It’s time for somebody else,» he said at the time.

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But LePage re-established residency in Maine five years ago and challenged his successor as governor, Democratic Gov. Janet Mills, in the 2022 election.

LePage ended up losing his bid for a third term by 13 points to Mills, but he did carry the 2nd Congressional District in that race.

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Moderate Democratic Rep. Jared Golden, a U.S. Marine veteran who deployed to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and who often bucks his own party in Congress, has held the seat since first winning it in 2018.

Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, at a news conference in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, March 6, 2024, has represented Maine's 2nd Congressional District since first winning the seat in 2018.

Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, at a news conference in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, March 6, 2024, has represented Maine’s 2nd Congressional District since first winning the seat in 2018. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

But Golden won re-election by a razor-thin margin last year in the district, which is the second-most rural in the U.S. and the largest east of the Mississippi River.

And Trump, who carried the district in the 2016, 2020 and 2024 presidential elections by nine, seven and 10 points, earned an electoral vote each time, as Maine and Nebraska, are the only two states in the union to allocate their electoral votes partially by congressional district.

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MAINE’S GOLDEN TAKES AIM AT FELLOW DEMOCRATS OVER POLICY

Golden, in a statement after LePage announced his candidacy, said, «I thought Paul was doing his best work in retirement.»

But the 42-year-old Golden has yet to announce whether he’ll seek re-election next year or instead run for either the state’s Senate seat or the open governor’s office.

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In his Fox News interview, LePage reiterated that the nation’s debt is a top motivation for him to return to politics. As of May 8, the national debt was $36,212,886,111,158.26, according to Fox News’ National Debt Tracker. 

«It’s the spending and the debt that this country has, and I’m worried about my grandchildren, great-grandchildren. And I think we have a president now that’s really willing to tackle it, and I’m willing to help,» he said.

But LePage added that «the other thing that is really big is what’s happening in our country with the woke environment. I think I want to be there to help clean that up if we can. Having boys play in girls’ sports is really sad.»

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He also highlighted his Tuesday meeting—part of a three-day swing through the congressional district—with Maine student Cassidy Carlisle, whom he described as «the courageous young woman fighting unfair male competition in girls’ sports.»

Maine’s 2nd Congressional District shares a long border with Canada.

When asked if he’ll be spotlighting border security and immigration as major issues in his campaign, Lepage said, «Big time.»

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But the controversial tariffs the president placed on nations across the globe last month has strained relations with Canada.

Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who's running a Republican campaign for Congress in 2026, speaks to a voter at a gun shop and indoor firing range, on May 7, 2025, in Poland, Maine.

Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who’s running a Republican campaign for Congress in 2026, speaks to a voter at a gun shop and indoor firing range, on May 7, 2025, in Poland, Maine. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

«I’m all for the tariffs,» LePage said. «The tariffs will fix our international trade and lower taxes.»

LePage acknowledged: «Is it going to hurt in the short term? Yeah, it’s going to hurt a little bit in the short term, but I think it’s necessary.»

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And he predicted that «the tariffs are going to be a short-term problem. I think they’re going to settle out.»

LePage spoke with Fox News at Lewiston’s Franco Center, a performing arts center and historic site of Franco-American culture located in a former Gothic church built in 1907 for French Canadian immigrants in Maine, which is located alongside the city’s historical mills and canals. 

Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who's running a 2026 Republican campaign for Congress, tours the Franco Center, a performing arts center and historic site of Franco-American culture located in a former Gothic church in the city of Lewiston, on May 7, 2025. Lepage was baptized as a child in the church.

Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who’s running a 2026 Republican campaign for Congress, tours the Franco Center, a performing arts center and historic site of Franco-American culture located in a former Gothic church in the city of Lewiston, on May 7, 2025. Lepage was baptized as a child in the church. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

The former governor, who survived a troubling and often brutal upbringing, gave Fox News a tour of the many dwellings within blocks of the Franco Center, where he spent his childhood.

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The eldest son of 18 children, LePage grew up speaking French in an impoverished home with an alcoholic and abusive father who was a mill worker.

At age 11, he ran away from home after his father beat him and broke his nose. He lived on the streets of Lewiston and often crashed on friends’ couches for a couple of years before earning a living shining shoes, washing dishes at a restaurant, and haling boxes for a local truck driver. 

«I had a very, very, rough upbringing as a youth. We were in welfare, we were in poverty,» he said.

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Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage points in the location of a building where he lived during his childhood, in Lewiston, Maine, on May 7, 2025.

Former Maine Gov. Paul LePage points in the location of a building where he lived during his childhood, in Lewiston, Maine, on May 7, 2025. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

LePage, speaking in the church where he was baptized and sought refuge during his family troubles, told Fox News, «It feels good coming in this building. This was a special building. A couple of nuns and priests were really helpful in my upbringing.»

He went on to graduate from high school, and with financial help from friends, attended and graduated from college.

He later enjoyed success as a businessman, including greatly expanding Marden’s Surplus and Salvage, a Maine-based discount store chain.

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Years later, he ventured into politics, winning election to the Waterville city council and later serving as the city’s mayor before winning statewide office in 2010.

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The former governor says his rough childhood has influenced his political life in a way that not many other politicians can understand.

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And he lamented, «Unfortunately, the mentality in the current society is not to help people get out of poverty, but it’s to keep them in poverty.»

«I want to help get them out of poverty,» he said. «I think there are so many programs that we can institute that will elevate people in poverty, rather than keep them.»

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Homosexualidad, aborto y abusos: qué piensa el papa León XIV sobre los temas más controversiales de la Iglesia

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Entre los principales interrogantes que rodean a la figura del nuevo papa León XIV, destacan las dudas sobre lo que piensa el pontífice respecto a ciertas temáticas controversiales para la Iglesia.

En rigor, el perfil de Robert Prevost combina el apego a los valores tradicionales de la institución religiosa con una apertura pastoral centrada en los sectores más vulnerables, aquellos que el papa Francisco consideraba prioritarios.

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Leé también: De Chicago a Chiclayo: en Perú vaticinan un pontificado de León XIV con un fuerte compromiso social

De este modo, las publicaciones del estadounidense de 69 años en la red social X (antes Twitter), anteriores a su elección, permiten trazar una línea clara sobre cómo piensa el nuevo pontífice en torno a debates candentes dentro y fuera del mundo católico.

Dos monjas detrás de un hombre que utiliza binoculares para observar la chimenea de la Capilla Sixtina. (Foto: Reuters / Marko Djurica)

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Inclusión y comunidad LGBTQ

Si bien se lo considera cercano en muchos aspectos a la línea de Francisco, León XIV mantiene una posición más cautelosa frente a ciertos temas de inclusión.

Aunque su enfoque general es de diálogo y respeto, nunca mostró señales de avanzar hacia una mayor apertura respecto de la homosexualidad y el matrimonio igualitario. En este sentido, está cerca de ser un conservador clásico.

Aborto, eutanasia y pena de muerte

En cuanto a temas bioéticos, aunque el papa León XIV no suele hacer declaraciones directas, su historial de retuits sugiere un rechazo al aborto y a la eutanasia, en línea con la doctrina oficial de la Iglesia.

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Sin embargo, no adopta un tono combativo, sino que parece apostar por una defensa de la vida desde una mirada pastoral.

En una de sus pocas apariciones televisivas antes del cónclave, también expresó su rechazo a la pena de muerte: “Estoy a favor de la vida en todo momento”, afirmó. Y agregó que “responder con venganza no está a la altura de la dignidad humana”.

Las puertas cerradas del balcón central de la Basílica de San Pedro. (Foto: Reuters)

Las puertas cerradas del balcón central de la Basílica de San Pedro. (Foto: Reuters)

Abusos sexuales en la Iglesia

Otro de los temas urgentes que marcará su pontificado es la respuesta a los abusos sexuales en el seno de la Iglesia. Cuando aún era obispo de Chiclayo, en Perú, Prevost fue enfático al rechazar el encubrimiento: “Eso hace mucho daño, tenemos que ayudar a las personas que han sufrido por el mal actuar”, señaló en una entrevista.

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También alentó a las víctimas a denunciar y exigió que la Iglesia actúe con firmeza. “Muchas veces se pide silencio y eso no se puede pedir”, sentenció.

Lejos de minimizar la gravedad de estos crímenes, León XIV reconoció la complejidad del problema y la necesidad de actuar con transparencia. “Queremos decirle a la gente que si sufrió por el mal actuar de un sacerdote, que venga y lo denuncie”, insistió.

Sin embargo, también recibió denuncias, como la de tres monjas que lo acusaron de encubrir abusos sexuales de sacerdotes a su cargo.

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Justicia social y migrantes

Prevost también usó las redes sociales para amplificar mensajes de justicia social y defensa de los migrantes.

En febrero de este año, por ejemplo, criticó abiertamente la visión del vicepresidente estadounidense JD Vance, quien propuso priorizar el amor por la familia y los ciudadanos nacionales por sobre los inmigrantes.

León XIV, en cambio, compartió una columna que lo desmentía tajantemente, subrayando que la enseñanza de Jesús no distingue jerarquías en el amor al prójimo.

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Esta postura no es aislada: también cuestionó los acuerdos entre Donald Trump y el presidente salvadoreño Nayib Bukele, que implicaban la deportación de migrantes a centros penitenciarios de alta peligrosidad.

Sacerdotes reaccionan al ver el humo blanco que indica que un nuevo papa ha sido elegido. (Foto: Reuters / Eloisa Lopez)

Sacerdotes reaccionan al ver el humo blanco que indica que un nuevo papa ha sido elegido. (Foto: Reuters / Eloisa Lopez)

El nuevo papa dejó en claro que la dignidad de los migrantes no puede ser negociada en función de intereses políticos.

Ya en 2018, como vicepresidente de la Conferencia Episcopal Peruana, Prevost había respaldado un pronunciamiento que denunciaba la separación de niños migrantes de sus padres en la frontera de Estados Unidos, apelando a “una mirada evangélica que ve en el rostro del desamparado la imagen misma de Cristo”.

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Ambiente, racismo y violencia armada

Además de estos posicionamientos, el nuevo pontífice manifestó su preocupación por el cambio climático, el racismo y la violencia armada.

Desde hace tiempo, el sucesor de Francisco decidió promover una Iglesia más comprometida con el cuidado del planeta, instando a los fieles a adoptar un estilo de vida más sustentable y a defender activamente la “casa común” frente a la crisis ecológica.

Por otro lado, tras el asesinato de George Floyd —un ciudadano afroamericano que murió asfixiado en 2020 bajo la rodilla de un policía en Estados Unidos— el nuevo papa expresó su dolor y se sumó al reclamo por justicia racial.

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Leé también: Así fue el saludo del nuevo papa León XIV desde el balcón del Vaticano

También condenó la proliferación de armas en EE.UU., al advertir sobre sus consecuencias en la seguridad pública y en la vida de las comunidades más vulnerables.

A la espera de sus primeros discursos formales como papa, los indicios disponibles muestran a León XIV como un líder que intentará tender puentes entre la tradición y la urgencia del presente.

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Con una mirada más social que doctrinaria, parece dispuesto a escuchar antes que imponer. Pero también a actuar con decisión cuando los valores fundamentales estén en juego.

papa León XIV, Robert Prevost, Vaticano

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