| Vatican Factions to Thrash It out in Fast Campaign
By Barney Zwartz
Guyra Argus
February 12, 2013
http://www.guyraargus.com.au/story/1297706/vatican-factions-to-thrash-it-out-in-fast-campaign/?cs=5
IT MIGHT be the world's most exclusive election, where 120 elaborately garbed elderly men employing ancient rituals amid great ceremony set the course for a sixth of the world's population, the 1.2 billion people who call themselves Roman Catholic.
It comes around, on average, every seven years, one of which will be 2013 thanks to the dramatic announcement by Benedict XVI on Monday that at 8pm on February 28 he will cease to be Pope.
By Easter, according to a Vatican spokesman, the 266th Pope will be installed. And this conclave offers the strongest likelihood yet that he may come from the developing world of Latin America, Asia or Africa - the first non-European Pope (if you don't count the Roman empire).
While there are several strong candidates, known as papabile, none stands out. So, as always, lobbying, and what in Australia might be called factional deals, will be vital.
What the cardinals decide are the most urgent issues will determine their choice. At 78, Pope Benedict was not initially considered a serious candidate in 2005, but acceptance of his view that fighting secularism in Europe was a top priority - combined with some impressive performances as dean of the college of cardinals - led to his election.
If the cardinals think that the loss of a European generation to what Pope Benedict called ''the culture of death'' and tackling the scourge of clergy sex abuse are top priorities, they will probably go for a European, in which case the next Pope is likely to be Italian.
If they are moved by arguments that the Catholic centre of gravity has shifted south to Latin America and Africa, and that the most vital challenges are poverty, social justice, AIDS and the increasing persecution of Catholic minorities in Asia and the Middle East, then a non-European pope becomes more probable.
Picking a papal winner is far harder than any horse race: there is no form guide and once the race gets serious the runners get tight-lipped, apart from Italian cardinals, who leak like sieves to Italian journalists.
Some cardinals belong to fluid alliances based on common theology or other interests, while others are loyal to the Pope and the institution. The Curia, or Vatican bureaucracy where many cardinals work, is riddled with factions and intrigues, as the leaking of a
stack of papal documents last year demonstrated.
A key rivalries is between the former and current secretaries of state, Angelo Sodano and his successor, Tarcisio Bertone, which means the Italians are unlikely to vote in a bloc. Sodano, 78, is not considered papabile, but he is still extremely powerful.
Though the Italians remain the largest single group, their influence is greatly reduced. In 1903 they were 38 of 62 electors; today they have 29 of 120. Europeans in all have 62 electors, Latin America 21, North America 14, Africa 11, Asia 10, the Middle East one, and Oceania one, Sydney Archbishop George Pell.
The top-ranked Italian candidate is Angelo Scola, 71, the son of a truck driver whom Benedict appointed Archbishop of Milan, a traditional sign of favour.
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The early favourite is Peter Turkson, 64, of Ghana. He is praised for his ''human touch'' and is an accomplished media performer.
The outstanding Latin American is Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, 70. He is theologically conservative, but an passionate advocate of social justice, who has described poverty and injustice as ''the real weapons of mass destruction''.
Normally, conclaves have avoided younger cardinals for fear of a long papacy but Benedict's precedent may change that. If that proves true, then Luis Tagle of Manil at 55 - the youngest and probably most progressive cardinal - comes into contention.
Whoever it is, do not expect a reformist or progressive pope. John Paul II and Benedict have stacked the college of cardinals with conservatives. There will be no movement on women, contraception, celibacy or any of the core concerns of liberal Catholics.
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