The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

In milestone, Pope Francis will address Congress this fall

- By Alan Fram

In a landmark event that could have many holding their breath, Pope Francis has agreed to address a joint meeting of Congress this fall. That sets the stage for an oration by an outspoken pontiff whose views on immigratio­n and global warming clash with those of many Republican­s who run the House and Senate.

Francis will speak Sept. 24, marking the first time the head of the world’s Roman Catholics will address Congress. It will come during the first U.S. visit of Francis’ two-year-old papacy, a trip also expected to include a White House meeting with President Barack Obama, a speech to the United Nations in New York and a Catholic rally for families in Philadelph­ia.

Saying he had “a bit of good news,” House Speaker John Boehner delivered first word of Francis’ speech at his weekly news conference T hursday.

“We’re humbled that the Holy Father has accepted our invitation and certainly look forward to receiving his message on behalf of the American people,” Boehner, R-Ohio, told reporters.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a written statement that she looks forward to “hearing his call to live our values, to protect the poor and the needy, and to promote peace.”

When he speaks to lawmakers, Francis will address a Congress that is 31 percent Catholic, well above the 22 percent of all Americans, according to a survey released last month by the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center. Boehner and Pelosi are both Catholic.

Francis, an Argentinia­n Jesuit and the first pope from the Western Hemisphere, has made helping immigrants a cornerston­e of his papacy and has called on wealthy nations to do more for the poor.

By this summer, he also plans to release an encyclical, or teaching document, on climate change, which he says is mostly manmade. He plans to use his trip to the U.S. to urge world leaders to take bold steps to curb global warming ahead of this fall’s U.N. climate change conference in Paris.

Republican­s have battled Obama’s efforts to make it easier for many immigrants in the U.S. illegally to remain in the country, and want to strengthen border security to keep more of them out. Many of them have also opposed efforts to reduce pollutants that contribute to global warming.

Francis, 78, has shown a willingnes­s to publicly call on political leaders to follow some of his values. In a pair of speeches to European leaders last November, he urged them to create jobs and help immigrants gain acceptance.

“We cannot allow the Mediterran­ean to become a vast cemetery,” he said, referring to the thousands of immigrants annually who try reaching Europe across that sea.

“He has a track record of challengin­g people,” said Mathew Schmalz, a religious studies professor at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachuse­tts. “I don’t think he’ll be overawed by Congress.”

Democrats may not be immune to Francis’ views, either.

He has condemned abortion and the use of artificial contracept­ion, and called marriage between a man and a woman a “fundamenta­l pillar” of society. However, he has not emphasized these issues as much as immigratio­n and poverty.

Boehner’s announceme­nt follows his controvers­ial invitation to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who will address Congress about Iran on March 3, two weeks before he seeks re-election. Boehner made that offer without consulting Obama, angering the White House and congressio­nal Democrats.

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis gives his speech in the Synod hall on the occasion of the closing ceremony of the IV Scholas Occurrente­s World Educationa­l Congress on Thursday at the Vatican. House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said on Thursday that Pope Francis will...
GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis gives his speech in the Synod hall on the occasion of the closing ceremony of the IV Scholas Occurrente­s World Educationa­l Congress on Thursday at the Vatican. House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said on Thursday that Pope Francis will...

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