White smoke from the Vatican this afternoon may signal that the new Pope is Cardinal Angelo Scola. But the longer the papal conclave goes on, the more likely it becomes that St Peter’s next successor will be a global figure – which probably means either a North or Latin American, rather than an African or Asian.
That, at least, is the prevailing consensus of the Vaticanisti this morning. And it makes sense. Scola, probably the least talked about of the heavy favourites, is the obvious choice to follow Pope Benedict: a theologian of similarly high standing (though his writings are less accessible to lay readers), he has grown in stature in the last few years, and is widely respected among – and familiar to – the Church hierarchy. He is Italian. He is, moreover, thought to have enough administrative experience, having been Patriarch of Venice and Archbishop of Milan.
The idea also is that a longer Conclave means that the American bloc – which is now thought to contain both Latin and North American Cardinals, together supposedly determined to reform the scandal-prone Curia – may be able to cobble together enough support for their preferred candidate.
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