As a wave of populism continues to rise throughout Europe – most recently Italy where refugees are now being turned away – conservative Catholics are coming together to take on Pope Francis.
At the center of the intra-faith movement are Steve Bannon, Italy’s new interior minister Matteo Salvini, and American Cardinal Raymond Burke – all of whom are staunchly opposed to liberal open-border policies advocated by Pope Francis.
Francis is a harsh critic of secure borders, and an advocate of unchecked migration – calling President Trump “un-Christian” for wanting to build his wall (which would be around 30-feet, the same height as the wall surrounding the Vatican).
It is no secret that Francis, whose first ever apostolic voyage was to the Italian island of Lampedusa to give support to the hundreds of thousands of migrants who have crashed onto the shores there, supports an open-border policy. He has celebrated mass on the Mexican border with the United States, and he has warned world leaders to prioritize the acceptance of migrants over national security concerns and to avoid “discrimination, racism, extreme nationalism and xenophobia.” –Daily Beast
Burke, Bannon and Salvini have railed against Francis, with Bannon calling the Catholic Church “one of the worst instigators of this open borders policy,” adding that “The Pope – more than anybody else – has driven the migrant crisis in Europe.”
“The Catholic Church is one of the worst instigators of this open borders policy,” Steve Bannon, a Catholic, says while responding to a tweet from Pope Francis.
“The Pope — more than anyobody else — has driven the migrant crisis in Europe,” he adds https://t.co/MVMvFlgLyc pic.twitter.com/CFrQXuHwpH
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) June 17, 2018
The three conservative Catholics came together earlier this month when Bannon was in Rome to celebrate Italy’s new populist coalition government run by Salvini, along with Five Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio and Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte. During his visit, Bannon took a side-trip to the 800-year-old Trisulti monastery under development by conservative UK catholic Benjamin Harnwell.
Harnwell runs a conservative Catholic organization, the Dignitatis Humanae Institute – which was “founded to help Christian politicians defend their faith in the public square.”
The monastery will host events with speakers like Bannon and Burke and conservative Christian leaders.
…
Harnwell and his organization are an important connection between Bannon and Burke. Harnwell is the one who first introduced the two, according to a New York Times article that is displayed on Harnwell’s website. Bannon spoke at one of Harnwell’s’ conferences by grainy video link back in 2014 during which he warned that the migration exodus would lead to a rise in populism. Burke was the keynote speaker the year before. –Daily Beast
Burke, meanwhile, is one of the pope’s harshest critics – openly challenging Francis’ ability to lead the church while campaigning for limitations on papal powers. Burke has openly called Islam a threat, and is an open supporter of President Trump.
Burke has been getting closer to Salvini, who visited him this week in Rome. It was not their first meeting. Salvini, meanwhile, closed Italian ports to NGO rescue ships this month – forcing several ships full of asylum seekers to divert to Spain and France.
Salvini also told an Italian television station Monday that he plans to conduct a census of the Roma community, and will kick anyone out of the country residing there illegally.
So it should come as no surprise that Bannon is a giant fan of Salvini – calling his policies an example for the rest of the world.
Salvini, meanwhile, is enjoying a boost in popularity within Italy, reinforced with a photo op with Cardinal Burke.
Francis, pushing back against the mounting Catholic coalition against his open-border policies, has been particularly vocal of late on the issue of migrants – both in regards to Italy’s closed ports and the US-Mexico border controversy over migrant children being separated from their families (meanwhile 80% of migrant children are unaccompanied – meaning their parents chose to separate from them when they shoved them across the border with a human trafficker).
“I would like to point out that the issue of migration is not simply one of numbers, but of persons, each with his or her own history, culture, feelings and aspirations,” Francis said this week. “These persons, our brothers and sisters, need ongoing protection, independently of whatever migrant status they may have.”
We look forward to demolition crews tearing down the “un-Christian” Vatican walls so that all those persons who need ongoing protection can seek shelter in the ever-loving and charitable arms of the Catholic church. Especially the children.
Amazing comments from the Pope- considering Vatican City is 100% surrounded by massive walls. pic.twitter.com/g3iVLDVGe5
— Dan Scavino Jr. (@DanScavino) February 18, 2016
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