The Pope’s approval ratings leave Trump’s in the shade
Seven in 10 Americans take a favourable view of Pope Francis.
Address God in difficult times, even if it sounds like a self-interested
prayer, Pope Francis tells a recent audience.
prayer, Pope Francis tells a recent audience.
Donald Trump may be entering the White House with historically low approval ratings among Americans, but Pope Francis, with whom he faced off verbally nearly a year ago, remains in the good books of 70 percent of American adults, according to a new Pew Research Center survey. Seven out of ten people said their opinion was “very” or “mostly” favourable when asked this month, compared with less than six out of 10 (57 percent) when he began his papacy in March 2013.
Among American Catholics Francis’ stock is even higher, which would not be surprising (after all, the Pope is a Catholic) if it were not for the fact that he has some very public critics among his flock. The Pew survey found that 87 percent of Catholics take a very or mostly favourable view of the pontiff, and that figure has never fallen below 79 percent during his whole pontificate. However, there has been a slight cooling, with those who have a very favourable opinion falling from a high of 62 percent 15 months ago, to 47 percent this month.
Pope Francis is also favourably regarded by 70 percent white mainline Protestants, as well as religious “nones” – the sort of people Francis is anxious to reach with a Church in “field hospital” mode. They are certainly more aware of him: about a third of nones had no opinion of the Argentinian Jesuit in March 2013, but that figure has fallen to 10 percent.
So, Holy Father, perhaps you are doing something right!
Apologies. Our commenting system went on strike yesterday and today. So if you couldn't read the comments or couldn't make comments, be of good cheer. They're back.
If you're interested, I'll tell you why it happened. We tweaked our social media buttons and added one which makes it easy to forward article links via email, not just by Twitter and Facebook. Apparently there was some sort of conflict in the coding -- which has been resolved.
I'll take advantage of this glitch to thank you for being part of MercatorNet. Comments are an important aspect of the website. I often disagree vehemently with some of them, but we're normally happy to let a thousand flowers bloom, to give voice to a diverse range of opinions. We don't want to live in a bubble.
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There's plenty to read in today's issue. Check out the links below.
Michael Cook
Editor
MERCATORNET
The media’s mania for pinpoint accuracy By Michael Cook |
A flight from mystery By Margaret Somerville |
The pink hat brigade hand the boy’s locker room another victory By Carolyn Moynihan |
Freedom of community: the next frontier in societies that work By Patrick F. Fagan |
Should mothers be paid to stay home? By Shannon Roberts |
There’s a new cat in town By Jennifer Minicus |
The Pope’s approval ratings leave Trump’s in the shade By Carolyn Moynihan |
America gets a new president By Sheila Liaugminas Like him or not, the office is bigger than the officeholder. It’s time to rise to the occasion. Read the full article |
The increasingly convincing link between autism and gender dysphoric kids By Michael Cook |
Reforming music: harmony and discord in the sixteenth century By Chiara Bertoglio |
Trump, hillbillies, and the forgotten men and women of America By Carson Holloway |
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