
In Trump news today, President Trump criticized Pope Leo XIV as “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy” in a social media post that escalated a days-long public feud with the first American pope, who has repeatedly condemned the US-Israel war on Iran and called Trump’s pre-strike threat to wipe out Iranian civilization “truly unacceptable.”
Summary
- Trump also claimed Pope Leo supports Iran having nuclear weapons, a claim the pope did not make, and said he did not want “a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States,” adding that Leo had not been on anyone’s list to become pope before the conclave.
- Pope Leo fired back from aboard a plane to Algeria: “I have no fear of the Trump administration or speaking out loudly about the message of the Gospel,” and vowed to continue calling for peace regardless of White House pressure.
- The confrontation has drawn rebukes from European leaders including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, a Trump ally, who said it is “right and normal” for the pope to call for peace and condemned Trump’s remarks as unacceptable.
Trump news today centers on the most pronounced public rupture between a US president and a sitting pope in modern history, one that began with Leo’s Palm Sunday call for peace during the Iran war and escalated through the week into direct personal attacks exchanged via social media post and press conference.
Leo, born in Chicago and elected in April 2025, has been increasingly direct since the US and Israel launched the Iran campaign. He condemned Trump’s pre-strike rhetoric as attacks against civilian populations that violate international law, urged Americans to contact their congressional representatives, and on Palm Sunday said: “Jesus is the king of peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war.” Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have both invoked God to frame the war in religious terms, which Leo has specifically and repeatedly rejected.
Trump’s escalation began with the Truth Social post calling Leo “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy.” He told reporters he does not think Leo is doing “a very good job” and said “I’m not a fan of Pope Leo.” He also posted an AI-generated image depicting himself in a Christ-like pose with light emanating from his fingers, which drew criticism from evangelical allies and was later deleted. Trump said he thought the image depicted him as a doctor.
On Tuesday night, Trump posted again: “Will someone please tell Pope Leo that Iran has killed at least 42,000 innocent, completely unarmed, protesters in the last two months.” He claimed Leo was in favor of Iran having nuclear weapons, a position Leo had not stated. He said he did not want a pope who would “say crime is OK in our cities.”
Leo responded on his plane to Algeria, the first stop of an 11-day Africa tour: “I have no fear of the Trump administration or speaking out loudly about the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do, what the church is here to do.”
Why the Confrontation Has Escalated
Rome-based Catholic correspondent Elise Ann Allen said Trump appeared to be “feeling threatened that Leo was emerging as a stronger figure on the international scene,” adding that Trump needs to be careful because “it’s the moderate Catholics who got him elected in both elections.”
The feud intersects with the Iran ceasefire expiry on April 22, which crypto markets are watching closely as a binary risk event. A ceasefire extension would likely maintain current risk-on conditions; a breakdown would reintroduce the geopolitical volatility that drove Bitcoin’s initial selloff from its October 2025 highs.
What It Means for the Political Environment
Pope Leo has become a significant voice in the international coalition of actors urging the US to seek a diplomatic resolution. His Africa tour framing of the conflict as part of a pattern of powerful leaders “ravaging the world” adds moral authority pressure to the administration at the same moment it is managing the Iran nuclear talks, the crypto reform legislative agenda, and the midterm electoral environment, where Catholic voters in swing districts remain a decisive constituency.