Vance calls the Vaticanâs views on immigration âtroublingâ
Vance calls the Vaticanâs views on immigration âtroublingâ July 1, 2026By Kate Scanlon OSV News Filed Under: Feature, Immigration and Migration, News, World News WASHINGTON (OSV News) â Vice President JD Vance said during a June 30 interview that he sees some of the Vaticanâs views on immigration as âtroubling.â Pope Leo XIV has stated that while âevery country has a right to determine who and how and when people enter,â in enforcing immigration policy âwe have to look for ways of treating people humanely, treating people with the dignity that they have.â President Donald Trump earlier this year lashed out at Pope Leo in a series of social media and verbal remarks after the pontiff expressed opposition to the Iran war. Vance, who is widely expected to seek the Republican Partyâs nomination for president in 2028, said on Fox Newsâ âThe Ingraham Angleâ show, âI do think that some of the things that have come out of the Vatican on the immigration question in particular have been troubling, and ultimately I disagree with it.â Speaking to host Laura Ingraham, Vance continued, âBut I actually like this interplay, Laura, between the pope, between Christian clergy, and between the administration. We donât always have to agree on these issues, but I think the fact that weâre actually having the right conversations, that weâre pushing back when we disagree about, you know, how theyâre, you know, applying a pragmatic principle of immigration policy, thatâs a natural and reasonable thing to do.â âBut I do think that we learn something in the interplay, and what I would hope that the Catholic leadership has learned from some of the things that me and (Secretary of State Marco Rubio) and the president have said about immigration is itâs not just about the dignity of the immigrant, itâs also about the dignity of the native-born factory worker who has their wages destroyed,â Vance said. âItâs about the dignity of the child who can be sex trafficked by a cartel member when you have open borders, and so what I tell the Catholic leadership I talk to who disagree with our immigration policies.â Vance said he is not âhostile about itâ in those discussions. âI invite them to have the conversation, but I also encourage them to remember that mass migration has victims, and you canât just view things from the perspective of the illegal immigrant. Youâve also got to view things from the perspective of the native-born people who have their lives upended by mass migration,â Vance said. âI think that argument will ultimately win the day, but Iâm not afraid of the conversation. I think itâs a good thing, and itâs a good role for the Church to play.â In Vanceâs book âCommunion: Finding My Way Back to Faith,â published in June, the vice president addressed the U.S. bishopsâ November 2025 âspecial pastoral message on immigration,â in which they voiced âour concern here for immigrants.â Vance acknowledged the statement was âwidely viewed as a critique of our administrationâs immigration policies,â but argued that the bishopsâ message was âadmirably measured. Or almost too measured.â He did not note in the book that the U.S. bishops explicitly condemned âindiscriminate mass deportationâ in that message. Although Vance said in the book he pressed Church leaders from the Vatican for their specific criticisms on immigration policy and did not receive them, individual and groups of U.S. bishops have publicly expressed concern about and directly addressed multiple immigration-related policies, such as ensuring families of mixed immigration status are not separated, that sensitive locations â such as houses of worship, schools and hospitals â are protected from enforcement actions, and that those in detention have access to the sacraments and pastoral care, among others. Pope Leo spoke affirmatively of the USCCBâs special message after its approval in November. Catholic social teaching on immigration balances three interrelated principles â the right of persons to migrate in order to sustain their lives and those of their families; the right of a country to regulate its borders and control immigration; and a nationâs duty to regulate its borders with justice and mercy. The interview took place the same day the U.S. Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trumpâs executive order limiting birthright citizenship, finding the order violated the 14th Amendment. Vance called that ruling âa major, major mistake.â The case concerned an executive order signed by Trump within hours of returning to the Oval Office on Jan. 20, 2025, that sought to change the longstanding legal interpretation of the 14th Amendment, which states, âAll persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.â But Vance argued that the administration would pursue other means of closing a âloophole.â âImagine if one of the five justices who made a bad call today, if they left the Supreme Court,â Vance argued. âWe want to make sure we get somebody good on there in the future.â However, the ruling against the executive order was 6-3. Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined the majority, but in his own opinion, he wrote that he disagreed that the executive order was unconstitutional; rather, it violated a related federal statute and was therefore unlawful. On July 4, Pope Leo is scheduled to visit the Italian island of Lampedusa, sometimes called the âDoor of Europe,â a key entry point on a sea route for migrants to Europe. read more immigration & migration Archdiocese of Baltimore responds to growing immigration enforcement Prayer key to sisterâs release from ICE detention, but foreign-born religious now on edge Supreme Court finds Trump executive order on birthright citizenship unconstitutional Bishops hold border Mass, rosary and procession for migrants as USA nears 250th Supreme Court allows policy permitting asylum-seekers to be turned away at US-Mexico border Bishops plan Mass on pilgrimage mountain Trump administration seeks to seize Copyright © 2026 OSV News Print
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