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Who is Robert Prevost, the new Pope Leo XIV and first American pope?

Paul Kirby

Europe digital editor

Ione Wells

South America Correspondent

Reporting fromChiclayo, Peru
EPA Robert PrevostEPA

Pope Leo XIV has supported his predecessor – and attention will focus on his early actions

Even before his name was announced from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica, the crowds below were chanting “Viva il Papa” – Long live the Pope.

Robert Francis Prevost, 69, has become the 267th occupant of the throne of St Peter and he will be known as Leo XIV.

He is the first American to fill the role of pope, although he is considered as much a cardinal from Latin America because of the many years he spent as a missionary in Peru.

Born in Chicago in 1955 to parents of Spanish and Franco-Italian descent, Leo served as an altar boy and was ordained in 1982.

Although he moved to Peru three years later, he returned regularly to the US to serve as a pastor and a prior in his home city.

He has Peruvian nationality and is fondly remembered as a figure who worked with marginalised communities and helped build bridges.

He spent 10 years as a local parish pastor and as a teacher at a seminary in Trujillo in north-western Peru.

In his first words as Pope, Leo spoke fondly of his predecessor Francis.

“We still hear in our ears the weak but always courageous voice of Pope Francis who blessed us,” he said.

“United and hand-in-hand with God, let us advance together,” he told cheering crowds.

Getty Images Pope Francis greets USA Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost during the Mass on the Jubilee of The Armed Forces, Police and Security Personnel at St. Peter's Square on February 09, 2025Getty Images

Cardinal Prevost shares a quiet moment with Pope Francis (R) in February 2025

The Pope also spoke of his role in the Augustinian Order.

In 2014, Francis made him Bishop of Chiclayo in Peru.

He is well known to cardinals because of his high-profile role as prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops in Latin America which has the important task of selecting and supervising bishops.

He became archbishop in January 2023 and within a few months, Francis made him a cardinal.

From white smoke to balcony speech, watch Pope Leo XIV unveiled as new pontiff

What is his background?

The new pontiff was born in Chicago in 1955, and served as an altar boy and was ordained in 1982.

Before becoming the new leader of the Catholic Church, Leo told Italian network Rai that he grew up in a family of immigrants.

“I was born in the United States… But my grandparents were all immigrants, French, Spanish… I was raised in a very Catholic family, both of my parents were very engaged in the parish,” he said.

Although Leo was born in the US, the Vatican described him as the second pope from the Americas (Francis was from Argentina).

Jari Honora, a genealogist and historian in the US state of Louisiana, said Leo has strong ties to New Orleans’ black community.

He told the BBC that the new pontiff’s maternal grandparents lived in a now-demolished home in the city’s seventh ward, and she also rented a place in the iconic Pontalba building in New Orleans’ French Quarter.

Mr Honora said Pope Leo’s grandparents are described as black or mulatto in historical records, but that the family’s identity was listed as white when they moved to Chicago – a common practice among black families looking to escape racial segregation.

The Pope’s background “indicates that [American] stories, the experiences of our ancestors are more tightly woven than we could have ever imagined,” he said.

“It shrinks that gap between Rome and New Orleans or New Orleans and Chicago.”

What are Pope Leo’s views?

Early attention will focus on Leo XIV’s pronouncements to see whether he will continue his predecessor’s reforms in the Roman Catholic Church.

In choosing his papal name, Leo has signified a commitment to dynamic social issues, according to experts.

The first pontiff to use the name Leo, whose papacy ended in 461, met Attila the Hun and persuaded him not to attack Rome.

The last Pope Leo led the Church from 1878 to 1903 and wrote an influential treatise on workers’ rights.

Former Archbishop of Boston Seán Patrick O’Malley wrote on his blog that the new pontiff “has chosen a name widely associated with the social justice legacy of Pope Leo XIII, who was pontiff at a time of epic upheaval in the world, the time of the industrial revolution, the beginning of Marxism, and widespread immigration”.

The new Pope’s LGBT views are unclear, but some groups, including the conservative College of Cardinals, believe he may be less supportive than Francis.

Leo XIV has shown support for a declaration from Francis to permit blessings for same-sex couples and others in “irregular situations”, although he has added that bishops must interpret such directives in accordance with local contexts and cultures.

Speaking last year about climate change, Cardinal Prevost said that it was time to move “from words to action”.

He called on mankind to build a “relationship of reciprocity” with the environment.

And he has spoken about concrete measures at the Vatican, including the installation of solar panels and the adoption of electric vehicles.

Pope Leo XIV has supported Pope Francis’ decision to allow women for the first time to join the Dicastery for Bishops, an administrative body that identifies and recommends future bishops to the Holy See.

“On several occasions we have seen that their point of view is an enrichment,” he told Vatican News in 2023.

In 2024, he told the Catholic News Service that women’s presence “contributes significantly to the process of discernment in looking for who we hope are the best candidates to serve the Church in episcopal ministry”.

Disagreements with the Trump administration?

The new pontiff is believed to have shared Francis’ views on migrants, the poor and the environment.

A former roommate of his, Reverend John Lydon, described Leo to the BBC as “outgoing”, “down to earth” and “very concerned with the poor”.

In recent months, he appears to have challenged the views of US Vice-President JD Vance.

A social media account in his name shared a social media post on X that was critical of the Trump administration’s deportation of a US resident to El Salvador.

The account also shared a critical comment piece written about a TV interview by Vance.

“JD Vance is wrong: Jesus doesn’t ask us to rank our love for others,” read the post, repeating the headline from the commentary on the National Catholic Reporter website.

Shortly after, the account shared another article, published by The Jesuit Review, and commented that Catholics “cannot support a rhetoric that demonizes immigrants as dangerously criminal simply because they have crossed the border in search of a better life for themselves and their families”.

The BBC has contacted the Vatican but has not independently confirmed the account, which was created in 2011, belongs to the new pontiff.

Pride and concern over his time in Peru

Leo moved to Peru as a missionary in 1985 to work in various rural communities.

He was known for working with marginalised people, and immersed himself in learning Spanish.

After a stint back in the United States, he returned to Peru again in 1988 to the city of Trujillo on the north coast where he trained young men to be priests and taught canon law.

In late 2014, when he was back in the US, he was put forward by Pope Francis to return to Peru as the Apostolic Administrator of Chiclayo, a diocese on Peru’s north coast and the following year he was appointed the Bishop of Chiclayo. He served in this role for nearly a decade.

In 2015, he obtained Peruvian citizenship. He reportedly often referred to Peru as “mi segunda patria”, my second homeland.

He championed various charities such as supporting soup kitchens and childcare for struggling families, and advocated for better housing on the north coast, which is prone to floods.

But not all in the country are proud of his record.

Accusations have been made about his handling of sexual abuse cases during his time as Bishop of Chiclayo. Three Peruvian women are among those who went public with claims that – as bishop – he failed to investigate and punish a priest accused of sexually abusing them, with claims dating back to 2007.

They said that when they raised their allegations with the diocese in 2022, no substantial or serious inquiry was opened.

Church officials denied this and said an investigation was opened, but was closed in 2023 by the ecclesiastical district and the Vatican after a local prosecutor said there was not enough evidence to support the civil claim.

An investigation by the prosecutor was reopened after media reports about the case and the BBC understands it is ongoing.

The BBC spoke in Chiclayo to Jesus Leon Angeles, who supports the parish where the accused priest works.

She said while the parish was “in defence of women”, it was also “in defence of the truth” and claimed the allegations were part of a “campaign” against Leo when he became a cardinal in Rome.

These allegations and the continued fallout from sexual abuse scandals within the Church are one of the challenges he will face as he now leads Catholics worldwide.

South America correspondent Ione Wells and Ali Abbas Ahmadi contributed reporting.

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New pope’s social media posts suggest disagreement with the Trump administration

How the first American pope will interact with the president of his homeland remains to be seen, but a few posts on social media might provide a clue.

Cardinal Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV, is also known on the social media site X as @drprevost, where he has occasionally weighed in with reposts on issues of faith and politics — including Trump administration comments or actions.

In February he shared articles that took issue with a comment by Vice President JD Vance, who converted to Catholicism as an adult and met on Easter Sunday with Pope Francis, who died the next day.

Vance’s visit came after the pope had written a letter to U.S. bishops in February, detailing his concerns over the Trump administration’s plans for mass deportations.

The pope underscored his support for “migrant and refugee brothers and sisters” in the letter: “Christians know very well that it is only by affirming the infinite dignity of all that our own identity as persons and as communities reaches its maturity. Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups.”

On Feb. 12, Prevost reposted an article from the Catholic publication America magazine saying the pope’s letter served as a rebuke of Vance’s comments in a Jan. 29 Fox News interview “that you love your family and then you love your neighbor, and then you love your community, and then you love your fellow citizens, and then after that, prioritize the rest of the world.”

Prevost reposted an article in a similar vein on Feb. 3 from the National Catholic Reporter headlined “JD Vance is wrong: Jesus doesn’t ask us to rank our love for others.”

Reposts on social media do not necessarily signal an endorsement of their viewpoints.

In April, the new pope reposted of a comment from writer Rocco Palmo, who questioned Trump and El Salvador President Nayib Bukele’s meeting in the Oval Office. The presidents met days after the U.S. wrongly deported a Salvadoran man residing in Maryland, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, and declined to bring him back, despite an order from the Supreme Court that the U.S. facilitate his return.

Palmo’s post quoted an article written by Washington, D.C., Auxiliary Bishop Evelio Menjivar: “Do you not see the suffering? Is your conscience not disturbed? How can you stay quiet?”

In 2018, when news of immigrant children being separated from their parents at the border reached a fever pitch during Trump’s first term, Prevost retweeted a post from the archbishop of Chicago that said: “There is nothing remotely Christian, American, or morally defensible about a policy that takes children away from their parents and warehouses them in cages. This is being carried out in our name and the shame is on us all.”

Trump on Thursday praised the news about Prevost. “Congratulations to Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who was just named Pope. It is such an honor to realize that he is the first American Pope,” the president wrote on X. “What excitement, and what a Great Honor for our Country. I look forward to meeting Pope Leo XIV. It will be a very meaningful moment!”

The liberal advocacy group Occupy Democrats, in a statement on X, suggested Trump’s praise would be fleeting: “Once [President] Trump gets a better sense of Pope Leo XIV’s beliefs — namely that Christians are called to love and care for all of the people of the world, not just white conservatives — the president will likely be singing a very different tune. If and when that attack comes, we will proudly stand with Pope Leo’s love and kindness against Trump’s hatred and cruelty.”

The announcement of Prevost as the first American to be named pope comes at a tense time for European-American relations, as the Trump administration is moving to isolate the United States and, in some cases, antagonize its traditional allies.

European nations are still navigating choppy economic waters after Trump issued sweeping tariffs last month against all countries. The papal decision Thursday coincided with the White House’s announcement of its first trade agreement struck with a European nation, the United Kingdom. Several other European nations are still waiting their turn to negotiate with Trump over lowering the tariffs.

While adjusting to rapid economic changes, European leaders are also still reeling from when Vance gave them a stern rebuke at the Munich security conference in February, when he warned against overregulation and advocated listening to all corners of the political spectrum — including Germany’s far-right party.

The papal announcement came days after the White House posted on its social media an AI-generated photo of Trump as pope.

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How the horseriding maths whizz from Chicago Robert Prevost rose to top of church to become Pope Leo XIV

FROM a budding maths genius in the US to an adventurous missionary in Peru – horseriding Pope Leo XIV has now reached the highest summit in the Catholic Church.

History-maker Robert Prevost is the first American Pope, and his incredible life has seen him climb from an altar boy to head of the Vatican.

Pope Leo XIV appearing on the Vatican balcony.

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Former altar boy and maths student Robert Prevost was elected on May 8Credit: Getty
Black and white photo of Robert Prevost, the newly elected Pope, as a young boy in a classroom.

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A young 7-year-old Robert Prevost at the St. Mary of the Assumption School (4th left at the back row), 1962
Black and white photo of Pope John Paul II shaking hands with newly ordained Rev. Robert Francis Prevost.

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Robert Prevost greets Pope John Paul II in 1982 after being ordained a priestCredit: St. Mary of the Assumption Parish
Pope Robert Prevost horseback riding.

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Newly elected Pope Robert Prevost on a horseCredit: Instagram/peandersongomes

Known as Father Bob, Prevost was announced as Pope Leo XIV on Thursday after less than 24 hours of voting in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican.

The dark horse beat steep odds of 66/1 to become God’s messenger on Earth before being unveiled to crowds of the faithful in Rome.

But his humble beginnings started all the way over in Chicago, Illinois, where he was born on September 14, 1955.

He was born to immigrant parents of French, Italian and Spanish descent.

Prevost’s first religious gig saw him work as an altar boy at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, just outside the far South Side of Chicago.

He completed his secondary studies at St. Augustine Seminary High School in 1973 – where he was consistently on the honor roll and was even given a Letter of Commendation for impressive academic results.

The whizz-kid then earned a degree in mathematics at Villanova University in 1977.

The Pope-to-be then joined the Order of St. Augustine, taking his vows in 1978.

He became a priest in 1982, with pictures showing the newly-ordained Rev. Robert Prevost greeting Pope John Paul II shortly after.

The multi-talented Catholic Church head can speak English, Spanish, Italian, French and Portuguese – and can even read Latin and German.

President Trump is honored by new American Pope

After being ordained a priest, he joined a mission in Peru in 1985 where he spent many years heading up a seminary.

He returned to the US in 1999, but before that had returned regularly to serve as a pastor and a prior in his home city.

Despite being an American the new pontiff holds Peruvian nationality, and is a beloved figure in the country due to his work with marginalised communities.

Prevost spent 10 years as a local parish pastor and as a teacher at a seminary in Trujillo in northwestern Peru.

During his momentous first speech, Leo spoke fondly of his predecessor Francis.

He said: “We still hear in our ears the weak but always courageous voice of Pope Francis who blessed us.”

Pope Francis placing a red biretta on a new cardinal's head.

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Pope Francis puts the red biretta on the head of new cardinal Robert Francis Prevost during a consistory in St. Peter Square at the Vatican, September 30, 2023Credit: Alamy
Pope Francis waves to a crowd.

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Pope Francis served as pope from March 2013 to April 2025Credit: AFP
Pope Leo XIV on the central loggia of St. Peter's Basilica.

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Leo XIV told the crowds: “We must be a church that builds bridges”Credit: AP

Pope Francis made Prevost the Bishop of Chiclayo in Peru one year after he became Pope.

Prevost was known for his high-profile role as prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops in Latin America – tasked with selecting and supervising bishops.

He was made archbishop in 2023 and within a few months he was promoted to the cardinal by Francis.

The horseriding Pope is seen as more traditional than Francis – but not the conservative hardliner some in the church were hoping for after his predecessor’s efforts to make the faith more progressive.

The new pontiff urged people to “build bridges through dialogue, through encounter, to come together as one people, always in peace”.

He also spoke in Spanish, saying to his South American friends: “I would particularly like to say hello to my compatriots from Peru.

“It was a great pleasure for me to work in Peru.”

Person draped in an American flag in St. Peter's Square.

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A person stands draped in a US flag after the appointment of Leo XIVCredit: Reuters
Crowd of people using phones to photograph the announcement of a new pope.

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Catholics celebrated the first American Pope in historyCredit: Reuters
Cardinals on a balcony at the Vatican.

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Cardinals listen as newly elected Pope Leo delivers the “Urbi et Orbi” messageCredit: Reuters
A crowd of people cheering, holding up an American flag, reacting to the announcement of a new pope.

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Crowds cheer and wave the stars and stripesCredit: AFP

US President Trump was quick to congratulate the Pope Leo XIV and said it’s “a great honour” for the US.

Sir Keir Starmer branded the election of the first American Pope as a “momentous moment” and said that he looks “forward to meeting the Holy Father and continuing to work closely with the Catholic Church”.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy congratulated the new Pope.

He said: “Ukraine deeply values the Holy See’s consistent position in upholding international law, condemning the Russian Federation’s military aggression against Ukraine, and protecting the rights of innocent civilians.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said he hoped the American pontiff would engage in “constructive dialogue” with the Kremlin.

The new Pope’s speech in full

Here is Leo XIV’s speech from the Vatican balcony in full:

Peace be with all of you

Dear brothers and sisters, this is the first greeting of Christ resurrected, the good pastor who gave life for the Lord and I would also like this greeting of peace to come into your hearts and join everyone, whoever they are, all peoples on the whole earth, peace be with you.

This is the peace of Christ resurrected, it’s a peace that’s disarming, humble and will also persevere and it comes from God, God who loves all of us unconditionally.

And let us keep hearing even the weak voices and Pope Francis was always courageous and blessed Rome.

The pope that blessed Rome, he is blessing the whole world on that Easter morning. So let us follow up that blessing.

God loves us, God loves all of you, sin will not prevail, we are all in the hands of God.

And at the same time without fear, let us be reunited hand in hand with God and amongst ourselves let’s move forward because we are the disciples of Christ, Christ preceded us, the world needs your light, humanity needs him as a bridge in order to be able to get to God and reach God’s love.

You must also help us and help one another. And we all must be a single peoples.

I would also like to thank all my brother cardinals who have chosen me to be the successor to Peter and to walk together with you as a united church always trying to find peace, justice and always trying to work as men and women faithful to Jesus Christ without fear and also to be missionaries.

I am a son of St Augustin, I am Christian with you and to that extent we can all walk together towards that land that God has prepared us for.

To the church of Rome, I would like to give you a speciial greeting. Together we must try to find out how to be a church that builds bridges, establishes dialogue, that’s always open to receive on this piazza with open arms to anyone that needs our charity, our presents, dialogue and love.

And I would just like also t osay something in Spanish. I particularly like to say hello to my compatriots in Peru

To all of you, brothers and sisters, of Rome, the whole world, we need to be a church that walks a path of peace, that always looks for charity, that is always looking to be close especially to those that are suffering

Today, the day in which we pray to the Madonna of Pompeii, our mother Mary always wants to stay close to us and help us with her love and her intercession.

Let us pray together, this new mission, for the whole church, and for peace throughout the world.

And let’s ask for this special grace for Mary, our mother. Hail Mary

The new Pope, who is active on social media, has repeatedly voiced his concerns over Donald Trump‘s immigration policies and shared his progressive views.

Both Leo and Francis were said to be close and Prevost was considered by Vatican insiders to be a potential kingmaker for the current election.

But few considered the new Leo XIV the likely winner of the secret vote.

The last pope to take the name Leo was Leo XIII, an Italian who led the church from 1878 to 1903.

Illustration of a step-by-step guide to the papal conclave.

White smoke erupted from the Vatican at around 5pm on May 8 as a signal that the new pontiff had been chosen.

The Pope greeted the world for the first time on the balcony in the iconic St Peter’s Basilica overlooking St Peter’s Square.

The newly elected pontiff appeared in papal robes – complete with a white silk sash and skullcap and red leather shoes.

The announcement of the new pope was made after clouds of white smoke or fumata bianca emerged from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel as a bell rang.

Crowds of faithful Catholics erupted with joy and were seen cheering in the iconic St. Peter’s Square.

Newly elected Pope Leo XIV waving from a balcony.

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Robert Prevost’s first words as Pope were simply: “Peace be with you”Credit: Reuters
Screengrab of cardinal electors entering the Sistine Chapel.

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The cardinal electors entering the Sistine Chapel at the beginning of the ConclaveCredit: EPA

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