Federal judge orders President Trump admin to immediately resettle 12K migrants
A federal judge on Monday ordered the Trump administration to immediately resettle some 12,000 refugees into the U.S. under a court order that partially blocks President Donald Trump’s executive order aimed at halting the refugee admissions program.
U.S. District Judge Jamal Whitehead, a 2023 appointee of former President Joe Biden, issued the order despite the Trump administration saying during a hearing last week that it should only have to process 160 refugees into the country and would likely appeal any order requiring thousands to be admitted.
“This Court will not entertain the Government’s result-oriented rewriting of a judicial order that clearly says what it says,” Whitehead wrote on Monday. “The Government is free, of course, to seek further clarification from the Ninth Circuit. But the Government is not free to disobey statutory and constitutional law — and the direct orders of this Court and the Ninth Circuit — while it seeks such clarification.”
Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office suspending refugee resettlement and ordering the Department of Homeland Security to report back in 90 days on whether resuming resettlement would be in the interests of the U.S.
DHS UNLEASHES POSSIBLE MONEY-SAVING MEASURE FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS TO SELF-DEPORT: ‘SAFEST OPTION’
In February, Whitehead blocked the Trump administration’s move to suspend refugee admissions into the U.S. in response to a lawsuit from refugee aid groups.
Whitehead said at the time that Trump’s actions were an “effective nullification of congressional will” in setting up the nation’s refugee admissions program.
NOEM CALLS FOR DEATH PENALTY FOLLOWING MARITIME HUMAN SMUGGLING ATTEMPT THAT LEFT CHILD DEAD
Whitehead ordered the Trump administration within the next seven days to resume processing the cases of refugees who are protected by the court order.
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The federal judge also told the government to immediately take steps to facilitate admission to the U.S. for those refugees whose clearances, including medical and security authorizations, have not yet lapsed.
Planned Parenthood caught prescribing hormones to minors with little supervision
FIRST ON FOX: Undercover phone calls released today by pro-life activist group Live Action reveal that Planned Parenthood clinics across several states offer cross-sex hormonal treatments to minors as young as 16 with very little parental or medical supervision.
The group is now calling on Congress to defund Planned Parenthood of hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer funding.
Live Action conducted an undercover investigation in which a woman posing as a 16-year-old minor called dozens of Planned Parenthood locations seeking “gender-affirming care.” At least seven facilities told her they would prescribe cross-sex hormones at the first appointment.
In several instances, Planned Parenthood assured the caller that she could choose to meet with a provider virtually and have access to cross-sex hormones as quickly as the same day, despite the person posing as a minor saying they had just begun considering changing her sex. Facilities in Minnesota and Oregon stated they could schedule the minor within days or on the same day.
Five facilities stated that no prior therapy, mental health clearance or prior documentation was needed for her to obtain cross-sex hormones.
‘GENDER-AFFIRMING’ TREATMENTS DON’T BENEFIT YOUTH, SAYS PEDIATRICIANS GROUP: ‘IRREVERSIBLE CONSEQUENCES’
In addition to being the country’s largest abortion business, Planned Parenthood is also one of the leading distributors of sex-change drugs.
Cross-sex hormonal treatments, such as taking either testosterone or estrogen, are meant to alter the body to exhibit characteristics to conform with a person’s “gender identity.” Besides altering the natural makeup and functions of the body, cross-sex hormonal treatments can result in several harmful side effects, including permanent infertility.
Live Action President Lila Rose told Fox News Digital that the investigation exposes “a chilling reality” that “Planned Parenthood is fast-tracking vulnerable children into irreversible hormone treatments with almost no medical oversight.”
“These dangerous drugs can sterilize, stunt growth and leave lifelong scars. This is not healthcare. It is child abuse, and it must be stopped,” she said.
PLANNED PARENTHOOD UNDER INVESTIGATION BY JUSTICE DEPARTMENT OVER SALE OF FETAL TISSUE
Live Action is calling on Congress to defund Planned Parenthood of all tax-dollar funding it receives from the federal government.
“Planned Parenthood receives more than $700 million in taxpayer dollars every year. That is a catastrophe, and it must end,” said Rose. “It’s time for Congress and the president to act and defund this abusive corporation of the $700 million they receive from taxpayers every year.”
This comes shortly after Fox News Digital reported that House Republicans are discussing measures that could potentially end federal funding of groups like Planned Parenthood as cost savings in their multitrillion-dollar bill advancing President Donald Trump‘s agenda.
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Two sources close to the House Energy and Commerce Committee told Fox News Digital that the move was being floated as lawmakers look to find at least $1.5 trillion in spending cuts to offset the cost of Trump’s tax priorities.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said last week that Republicans would target “big abortion” in the budget reconciliation process.
Planned Parenthood did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Agents raid upscale restaurant owned by liberal news anchor’s husband
The restaurant belonging to the husband of CBS News anchor Norah O’Donnell was raided by ICE on Tuesday.
A local D.C. Fox affiliate reported that ICE agents went into “Chef Geoff’s” restaurant in D.C. that morning and asked to see staff members’ I-9 forms proving they are legally allowed to work in the U.S. The visit reportedly sent staff into “a panic.”
“Chef Geoff’s” is owned by Geoff Tracy, who is married to the longtime CBS News anchor and correspondent.
ICE FILES DETAINERS AGAINST 2 ILLEGAL ALIENS, INCLUDING 1 FACING ATTEMPTED MURDER CHARGES FOR SHOOTING SPREE
According to Fox 5, “Nearly a dozen law enforcement and immigration officials wearing DHS uniforms” went into the restaurant located on New Mexico Avenue, Northwest.
The agents were at Tracy’s restaurant for around 90 minutes, though no one was taken into custody.
The ICE stop-ins have occurred at multiple D.C. restaurants in recent days. The outlet reported that restaurants in Dupont Circle and Columbia Heights have been visited by ICE agents as well.
Millie’s — a restaurant near D.C.’s Massachusetts Avenue — told Fox 5 that seven agents entered the restaurant on Tuesday as well, demanding to see I-9 forms. According to staff, the agents had a warrant that was signed by another ICE agent, not a judge.
ICE TOUTS RECORD-BREAKING IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT DURING TRUMP’S FIRST 100 DAYS
In a statement to “The Washingtonian,” Millie’s owner, Bob Blair, recalled that the agents “all came in all of the public entrances at the same time.”
Blair slammed the government inspections, saying, “We were under the impression that they were focusing on trying to find criminals. And this is just a whole new level of harassment to our hard-working, law-abiding employees.”
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser weighed in on the raids, telling the outlet, “I have heard those reports. I’ve been getting them all morning. I am disturbed by them. It appears as though ICE is at restaurants, or even at neighborhoods, and it doesn’t look like they’re targeting criminals, and it does look like they’re disrupting.”
Bowser added that D.C. law enforcement is in no way involved with the raids.
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The raids come as President Donald Trump‘s administration remains committed to deporting illegal immigrants from the country.
Trump is also suing O’Donnell’s employer, allegedly that CBS deceptively edited a 2024 interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris to aid her presidential campaign.
ICE, CBS, and “Chef Geoff’s” did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
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Smoke rises from Sistine Chapel as cardinals cast first vote
Black smoke was seen rising from the roof of the Sistine Chapel, indicating that cardinals failed to select a new pope during the first round of voting.
The 133 voting cardinals first entered the conclave on Wednesday to deliberate on a successor to Pope Francis, who died last month.
The conclave will continue on Thursday, when the Cardinals will be able to vote up to four times before retiring until the next day.
The tens of thousands of spectators waiting in Vatican City for a new pope to be elected learned late Wednesday that the vote will continue, after black smoke billowed from the chimney installed on the roof of the Sistine Chapel.
One hundred thirty-three Cardinals from 71 different countries across the globe gathered in Vatican City to begin the Conclave to elect the new Pope. The process began on May 7, 2025 at the Sistine Chapel, which is now closed to the public.
Former Pope Francis was instrumental in making the College of Cardinals less eurocentric by expanding it to include more cardinals from other continents.
Fifty-three Cardinals from Europe, 37 from the Americas, 23 from Asia, 18 from Africa, and four from Oceania will be present at the Conclave. Cardinal and Archbishop of New York Timothy Dolan will be in attendance as one of 10 Cardinals from the United States.
For the first time, 15 nations will be represented by native Cardinal Electors hailing from Haiti, Singapore, Serbia, Papua New Guinea, Cape Verde, the Central African Republic, Myanmar, Rwanda, Tonga, Malaysia, Sweden, Luxembourg, Timor Leste, Paraguay, and South Sudan. The age range of the Cardinals spans generations, from the youngest being 45, Mikola Bychok of Ukraine and the oldest being 79, Carlos Osoro Sierra from Spain.
The Conclave will continue on Thursday, when the Cardinals will be able to vote up to four times before retiring until the next day.
Jacqliene Mangini contributed to this report.
All eyes continued to be fixated on a chimney installed on the Sistine Chapel’s roof, as spectators continue to wait for white smoke to billow out, signifying a new pope has been voted in
No pope has ever been elected on the first day of a conclave for centuries, so it is quite a surprise that so many people have gathered.
Some spectators are chalking up how much Pope Francis was loved by Romans and the faithful.
Local city authorities are saying between 30,000 and 50,000 have gathered for the event.
But people are getting impatient for smoke!
In 2005 there was smoke at 8:05pm local but tonight’s wait is breaking records.
On the other hand, there have never been so many cardinals voting, with a total of 133 taking part in the historic vote.
Fox News’ Courtney Walsh Annesi contributed to this report.
After a pope dies, the Catholic Church chooses its next leader through an ancient electoral process called the “papal conclave.”
In practice, since at least 1276, the conclave gathers the church’s top bishops – called the College of Cardinals – from around the world.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
The conclave takes place in the Vatican’s
Sistine Chapel and cardinals are kept in strict isolation to keep them far from any outside influence from the rest of the world. This isolation is so important in the process that even the name conclave comes from the Latin “cum clavis,” which means “with key,” indicating how the cardinal electors deliberate behind locked doors over who will be the new pope.
There is also an emphasis on choosing a pope quickly to lessen the amount of time the church spends without a leader. The cardinals cast their first vote the day the conclave begins. They then cast votes at least twice every day after – in the morning and evening – until a pope is selected.
The threshold for winning the papal election is a two-thirds vote.
The vast majority of Popes have been Italian but the last three pontiffs have all hailed from non-Italian countries.
Of the 266 Popes to lead the Catholic Church, 217, or 81% of them were Italian with Italy’s dominance in the papacy reflecting the Vatican’s location in Rome, Italy, and the historic influence of the Italian clergy in the Church.
Despite Italy’s papal preeminence, there hasn’t been an Italian Pope since Pope John Paul I served for 33 days in 1978.
He was succeeded by Pope John Paul II
(1978–2005) from Poland, who was followed by Pope Benedict XVI (2005–2013) from Germany and then Pope Francis (2013–2025) from Argentina, who was the first from the Americas.
For 455 years between the death of Dutchman Adrian VI in 1523 and the election of John Paul II in 1978, the Italians had total control of the papacy.
Saint Peter, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus, is considered the first Pope and he was from Bethsaida in Galilee, which is in present-day northern Israel.
There are several conservative cardinals who are believed to be top contenders for the papacy, including Cardinal Peter Erdo, who has been critical of Francis’ position on divorce and immigration.
Erdo has argued that divorced or re-married Catholics should not be allowed to receive Holy Communion due to his position regarding the “indissolubility of marriage.”
The Catholic Herald pointed out that appointing a conservative pope following Francis’ tenure would “send a powerful message about the direction the Church would be taking.”
Erdo has also differed from Francis greatly on immigration and argued in 2015 that permitting refugees to resettle is tantamount to human trafficking.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
Cardinal Robert F. Prevost is a potential front-runner to become the next pope.
Prevost currently serves as the prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, which advises the pope on bishop appointments across the globe.
Prevost is one of only a handful of names considered to have a slight advantage in the papal conclave, which officially began Wednesday.
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church does not get paid what many consider a traditional salary. Instead, the Vatican provides for the pontiff’s needs, from housing, food, transportation and other expenses in the form of stipends and allowances.
The Vatican, referred to as “the world’s smallest country,” is sustained by “an economy that relies on a combination of donations, private enterprises, and investments to generate revenue,” according to Investopedia.
Pope Francis declined any sort of salary when he took office in 2013, The Economic Times reported back in February, adding that the pontiff at the time had a net worth of “around $16 million, which includes various assets provided to him as the pope.”
The Vatican’s financial situation has been in peril for years, with its annual operating deficit growing to over $90 million in 2023, according to reports. In November, Pope Francis warned that the Vatican’s pension fund — which provides pensions to employees of the Holy See and Vatican City State — has been facing a “severe prospective imbalance” that “tends to grow over time in the absence of interventions,” according to the Vatican News.
The governing body of the Vatican, also known as the Holy See, doesn’t provide exact numbers regarding its finances. However, the Central Intelligence Agency’s World Factbook estimated its revenues and expenditures in 2013 notched $315 million and $348 million, respectively.
It generates this money through various avenues. According to the Michigan Journal of Economics, the Holy See generates some of its revenue through Peter’s Pence, which is a term that describes donations collected from Catholics around the world and given to the Pope on an annual basis. This accounts for $27 million each year, with the largest contributions deriving from the United States, Germany and Italy, according to American Magazine.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Vatican and United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for more information about how the pope gets paid, but did not immediately hear back.
This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Pilar Arias and Daniella Genovese
Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, offered himself up as a hostage in exchange for the release of the Israeli children brutally abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023.
Though Hamas did not accept the exchange, the offer garnered international attention and brought his name forward as a potential future leader of the Catholic Church.
Should the Italian cardinal be chosen for the papacy, it would be the first time in 50 years that an Italian headed the Catholic Church, which was previously long seen as under Italian control – though, given the decades he has spent in the Middle East he is also seen as a Vatican outsider.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
The papal conclave officially began just before 12 p.m. ET on Wednesday after all 133 voting cardinals swore an oath of secrecy.
After their oaths were made, the Extra Omnes order was given, removing everyone from the chamber aside from the approved cardinals. The doors at the Sistine Chapel were then sealed.
The cardinals could deliberate for hours or days before selecting a new pope.
All 133 voting cardinals swore an oath of secrecy before beginning the papal conclave on Wednesday.
The oath, in Latin, reads, “Et ego [given name] Cardinalis [surname] spondeo, voveo ac iuro. Sic me Deus adiuvet et haec Sancta Dei Evangelia, quae manu mea tango.”
In English, the oath reads, “And I, [given name] Cardinal [surname], so promise, pledge and swear. So help me God and these Holy Gospels which I touch with my hand.”
American Cardinal Raymond Burke, a Wisconsin native and former archbishop of St. Louis, is considered to be the leading American candidate. The 76-year-old cardinal is also viewed as being from the conservative side of the Church.
He is a proponent of the Latin Mass, and has been critical of Pope Francis regarding the Church’s new language around artificial contraception, LGBT issues and civil marriages. Burke was made a cardinal by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
Luis Antonio Tagle is also believed to be a frontrunner among voting cardinals and serves as the pro-prefect for the section of first evangelization of the Dicastery for Evangelization, as well as president of the Interdicasterial Commission for Consecrated Religious.
He has been dubbed the “Asian Pope Francis” particularly for their similarities when it comes to their more embracing position of the LGBTQI community than their predecessors.
In a 2015 interview, Tagle said the Church’s “severe” position on the LGBTQI community, divorcees and single mothers was doing it harm.
According to the Catholic Herald, Tagle “would be hailed by liberals, given the changing demographic of the Church.”
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
While the vast majority of Catholic cardinals participating in the papal conclave at the Vatican this week are wearing red and white, a smattering are dressed differently. Here’s why.
The Catholic Church is comprised of 24 separate churches, by far the largest of which is known as the “Latin rite.” Cardinals in the Latin Rite wear the recognizable red and white, but cardinals of the other churches, known as the “sui iuris” churches, often dress differently.
The most recognizable such cardinals are the representatives of the eastern churches, who are dressed in black.
The Domus Sancte Marthae, the St. Martha House, is a modern residence for Catholic clergy visiting Vatican City and is managed by the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
During a papal conclave
, it is exclusively reserved for the cardinal electors from around the world. St. Pope John Paul II decreed that this space should be built to create a more spacious and hospitable environment for the clergy during a sede vacante. Domus has 106 suites and 22 single rooms and was built in 1996. It is staffed with clergy to hear confessions in different languages, medical doctors, and support personnel. All people staying at the Domus must be preapproved by the Cardinal Camerlengo and three Cardinal Assistants.
Prior to staying here, the clergy would sleep on cots in much smaller rooms next to the Sistine Chapel during a conclave. The original St. Martha House Foundation ran a hospice and pontifical dispensary.
Cardinal Angelo Becciu, 76, announced late last month that he would withdraw himself from participating in the vote of the College of Cardinals to appoint the next pope.
The decision came after Becciu, who was embroiled in the Vatican’s 2020 “trial of the century” before he was convicted in 2023 of embezzlement and other finance-related charges, caused a stir by claiming he had a right to participate in the conclaves vote.
CONVICTED CARDINAL ANNOUNCES HE WON’T BE PART OF CONCLAVE TO CHOOSE POPE FRANCIS’ SUCCESSOR
But according to the Associated Press the fallen cardinal was presented two letters by Pope Francis urging him not to participate in the ballot process.
Francis in 2020 forced Becciu to resign from his top post
as head of the Vatican’s saint-making office and to renounce the rights of the cardinalate following claims that he embezzled millions of dollars of the Vatican’s money.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
He, along with nine others, were accused of crimes that included fraud, embezzlement, extortion, corruption, money laundering and abuse of office, though he maintains his innocence.
Who is the dean of the College of Cardinals?
The current dean is Italian Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re. He is the head of the College of Cardinals
who informs the rest of the cardinals and the ambassadors to the Holy See of the pope’s death once he learns of it from the camerlengo. He convenes the conclave and presides as the electors take their oaths. Since Re is 91, he cannot vote, so he will leave the Sistine Chapel once the conclave begins and the most senior cardinal, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, takes over.
What is the Domus Santa Marta?
This Vatican guesthouse, built in 1996, specifically houses cardinals during a conclave and is used at other times as a hotel for visiting priests and Vatican officials. Pope Francis never moved out after he was elected, choosing to live in suite 201 rather than the papal apartments in the Apostolic Palace. Because there are so many electors this time and not enough room in the main building, some are being housed in an adjacent residence.
What does ‘extra omnes’ mean?
A Latin phrase for “all out,” it’s spoken by the master for papal liturgical celebrations, currently Italian Archbishop Diego Ravelli, to ask all those present except the cardinal electors to leave the Sistine Chapel to begin the voting process during the conclave.
What does it mean when they say, ‘Habemus Papam’?
This Latin phrase translates to “We have a pope.” These are the words used by the “protodeacon” of the College of Cardinals to announce from the gallery of St. Peter’s Basilica that a new pope has been elected. He then says the new pope’s birth name and the name he has chosen to use as pope, also in Latin. The current protodeacon is French Cardinal Dominique Mamberti.
Who are the infirmarii?
These are the three cardinals, chosen by a random drawing from the electors, who are charged with gathering the ballots of any electors who made it to Rome but are ill during the conclave.
Who are the revisers?
These are the three cardinals, chosen by a random drawing from the electors, who are charged with reviewing the ballots during the conclave.
Who are the scrutineers?
These are the three cardinals, chosen by a random drawing from the electors, who are charged with reviewing each ballot and announcing it to the assembled conclave after each round of voting. They then tally the votes — to win the election, two-thirds of the votes are necessary — and they burn the ballots.
What does the saying ‘sede vacante’ mean?
This is Latin for “vacant seat,” the period between the pope’s death or resignation and the election of a new one.
What does the text ‘Universi Dominici Gregis’ contain?
This Latin phrase means “the Lord’s whole flock.” It’s the Vatican constitution that regulates the processes from a pope’s death until a new one is elected. St. John Paul II issued it in 1996 during his papacy, and Pope Benedict XVI twice amended it, most significantly by removing John Paul’s provision that after about 12 days of balloting a simple majority could elect a new pope rather than a two-thirds majority. If the conclave lasts that long, the top two vote-getters go to a runoff, with a two-thirds majority required to win. Neither of the top two candidates casts a ballot in the runoff.
The Associated Press contributed to this report
A conclave, organized by the camerlengo, presently Cardinal Kevin Ferrell, begins 15 to 20 days after the pope’s death.
“Anything could happen,” Tim Gabrielli, associate professor and Gudorf chair in Catholic intellectual traditions at the University of Dayton in Ohio, told Fox News Digital.
Pope Francis, the 266th pontiff, born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, died on April 21, 2025, after 12 years as the Bishop of Rome.
“We really don’t have much of an idea,” he said of Pope Francis’ successor
. “I think anybody who says otherwise is maybe posturing.”
Among the church leaders floated as the candidates-in-waiting are Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Filipino Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, Hungarian Cardinal Peter Erdo and American Cardinal Raymond Burke.
“It’s helpful to remember that the cardinal electors are going to be, conclave means with key, locked away … away from media and influences,” Gabrielli said.
“We’ve got a group of people who play important roles in the church throughout the world, and they’re coming together, spending time together, and this group of cardinals hasn’t spent a lot of time together,” Gabrielli added.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Gabriele Regalbuto.
Visitors wishing to see some of the most famous sites at the Vatican City will need to be patient during the conclave. While most of Vatican City will remain open during this significant period for the Catholic Church, the Sistine Chapel and Vatican Museums will be temporarily closed due to the meeting of the College of Cardinals. These closures will disrupt long-awaited tours for thousands of visitors.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
The length of each conclave is unique and is determined by the number of ballots cast by the Cardinals for the new pope. To know when the new pope is elected, white smoke will appear from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel simultaneously with the ringing of bells to signify this.
The process of burning the College of Cardinal’s ballots goes back centuries. In a time with no mass media, burning the ballots was a way to communicate the voting status. In the early 20th century, the tradition evolved to use black smoke to signal that a pope had not been elected and white smoke to signal that a pope had been chosen.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
The ballots were burned to ensure the secrecy of the ballot. The Conclave process
is of the utmost secrecy. The Cardinals are secluded from the outside world in the Vatican City’s Sistine Chapel where the Cardinals can vote without the influence of the secular world and political influences, as well as giving them space to discuss opinions freely. The secrecy also relates back to a central Catholic belief that the Holy Spirit should guide the Cardinals to make the best choice for a new pope.
Just 10 out of the 133 voting cardinals who will be participating in the papal conclave, hail from the United States.
These include: Cardinal Raymond L. Burke, retired prefect of the church’s highest court known as the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura; Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago; Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, retired archbishop of Galveston-Houston; Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York; Cardinal Kevin J. Farrell, former prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, the Family and Life under Pope Francis; Cardinal Wilton D. Gregory, retired archbishop of Washington; Cardinal James M. Harvey, Archpriest of the Papal Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls; Cardinal Robert W. McElroy, current archbishop of Washington; Cardinal Robert F. Prevost, prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops which advises the pope on bishop appointments across the globe; and Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin, the Archbishop of Newark, New Jersey.
There are a few other remaining U.S. cardinals, but they are too old to participate. Cardinals must be under 80 years of age to vote during the papal conclave.
The College of Cardinals will meet on Wednesday, May 7, 2025, to initiate the papal conclave which is the decades old process of selecting the next pope.
The meeting is set to begin nine days after Pope Francis’ funeral which concludes a period of mourning known as “Novemdiales.”
The holy body is made up of 252 members, though only 135 members may cast a ballot as a voter must be younger than 80 years old on the day of the pope’s passing.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
The body, which takes a pledge of secrecy, will hold a vote each day until a decision is reached by a two-thirds majority.
According to the Vatican, if the voting process starts on the first day of the conclave, then only one vote will be held that day. Each day following two ballots will be held in the morning and along with two ballots in the afternoon until a decision is reached.
If after the third day a decision has not been reached, the conclave will take a one day break.
Upon electing a new pope, the cardinal in question will be asked by the Dean of the College if he accepts the position and which name he would like to be called. Once the individual accepts the role as the new pope the conclave concludes.
Only cardinals under 80 years of age may vote at a conclave.
Of the current 252 Cardinal Electors, 133 are under 80 and therefore eligible to vote. However, two cardinals will not be attending due to health reasons meaning 133 cardinals take part in the process.
The vast majority of eligible electors are first time voters although an exact number is not known. Notably, 27 are from Asia and Oceania thanks to the late Pope Francis’ drive to name cardinals outside Europe and the Americas.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
The youngest member of the first-time voter group is Cardinal Mykola Bychok, of Ukraine, who is 45.
His service included being vicar of the Ukrainian Catholic Parish of St. John the Baptist in Newark, New Jersey, according to EWTN.
The second youngest is Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, 50, from Mongolia while the third youngest is Cardinal Americo Aguiar, 51, of Portugal.
The trio are among the 108 electors appointed by Pope Francis.
Of the 133 cardinals voting, 15 are under the age of 60. The conclave is set to be the largest in the history of the Catholic Church.
Cardinal Anders Arborelius is the first Swedish cardinal in history and has become one of the favorites slated as one of the emerging front-runners to lead the Catholic Church.
As Sweden is a predominately Protestant nation with Catholics making up just over 1% of the country, Arborelius’ elevation from Bishop to Cardinal by Pope Francis in 2017, is still seen as an advantage when it comes to vying for the top spot.
He was also the first Swede to be made a bishop of Stockholm since the 1517 Protestant Reformation when St. John Paul II appointed him in 1998, reported the Catholic Review.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
The first clue of the next pope’s direction will be the name he chooses.
Popes used their given names for most of the Catholic Church’s first millennium. But in the mid-20th century, new popes began to choose names signaling the aim of their papacy.
The first pope to take on a different name was the 6th century Roman Mercurius, who had been named for a pagan god and chose the more appropriate name of John II.
The practice of adopting a new name became ingrained during the 11th century, a period of German popes who chose names of early church bishops out of “a desire to signify continuity,” said the Rev. Roberto Regoli, a historian at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University.
For many centuries, new popes tended to choose the name of the pope who had elevated them to cardinal. John was the most popular, chosen by 23 popes, followed by Benedict and Gregory, each with 16.
Only starting in the mid-20th century did new popes begin to choose names signaling the aim of their papacy, Regoli said.
“Even now, as we are waiting for the new pope, the name with which he will present himself will help us to understand the horizon towards which he wants to proceed,” Regoli said.
Some names have been out of use for centuries, like Urban or Innocent.
“I don’t think anyone will pick Innocent,″ Imperatori-Lee said, given the abuse and other scandals that have rocked the church. ”I don’t think that would be the right choice.”
Imperatori-Lee suggested another name that might signal a continuation of Francis’ legacy: Ignatius, for the founder of Francis’ Jesuit order.
“It would be interesting,” she said. “We’ve never had one of those.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report
The papal conclave will take place in the Sistine Chapel which will be transformed into a highly secure and secluded environment to ensure the election process is not compromised.
Only cardinal electors and a few authorized personnel are allowed inside the chapel during the conclave. The chapel will be physically sealed off from everyone else with its windows covered and a raised floor installed to protect the historic marble inlay and to conceal any potential surveillance devices.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
Prior to the conclave, the chapel is thoroughly inspected for hidden surveillance devices to prevent any leaks of confidential proceedings. Wi-Fi will also be blocked throughout Vatican City for the duration of the conclave.
In addition, all cardinal electors take a solemn oath to maintain the secrecy of the proceedings and violating this oath can result in excommunication.
Smoke from the chapel’s chimney is the only way to signal the outcome of the voting.
During the conclave, cardinals reside in the Domus Sanctae Marthae, a Vatican guesthouse, which will also be secured.
Viewership of the movie “Conclave,” which depicts the choosing of a new pope, has spiked in the days since Pope Francis died. But how much of the Academy Award winner is accurate to the real event about to take place?
The Rev. Bryan Pham, a Jesuit priest and associate director for Catholic Studies at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, told Fox News Digital
he believes the movie was accurate according to the “timeline and sequence of events of how to handle the death of a pope, the relaying of information, the gathering of the cardinals, and general procedures of getting the new pope elected.”
Pham, who was a graduate student in Rome during the last conclave that elected Pope Francis in 2013, also said the “side conversations among the cardinals as they try to identify the challenges and the needs of the church when considering the qualities of the next pope” rang true.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Brie Stimson.
Another conservative cardinal thought to be a serious contender is Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu from the war-torn nation of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Membership of the Catholic Church in Africa is growing faster than anywhere else in the world, according to the Associated Press.
The 65-year-old Ambongo controversially rejected Pope Francis’ blessing of same-sex couples by the Catholic Church. In a letter signed by other African priests, they said they refused to follow the pontiff’s declaration because such unions are “contrary to the will of God.”
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
While there is no official candidate for the next pope, there are several front runners who are considered “papabile” and likely to be at the top of the ballot tallies.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, 70, an Italian who served as the Vatican’s secretary of state under Pope Francis and is the highest-ranking diplomat in the Holy See – which is the governing body of the Catholic Church.
He is deemed a “moderate” among Catholics.
WHO COULD BE THE NEXT POPE?
Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, 67, is from the Philippines and has been dubbed the “Asian Pope Francis” for his more accepting position on the LGBTQ community than some of his colleagues. He is viewed as a “liberal” in the College of Cardinals.
Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu, 65, is from the Democratic Republic of Congo and is considered a serious front-runner for the papacy. He is viewed as far more conservative than Pope Francis and in 2024 signed a statement on behalf of the bishops conferences of Africa and Madagascar in refusal to accept Francis’ declaration that allowed priests to bless same-sex couples, reported the Associated Press.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin
, the Vatican’s secretary of state, is the highest-ranking diplomat in the Holy See – which is the governing body of the Catholic Church – and is believed to be among the cardinals most likely to be elected to the top position.
His favor among cardinals in the Sacred College, who will vote on the next pope, is due to his politically moderate position and his career in diplomacy, reported The New York Post.
Parolin, who spent part of his career in Mexico and Nicaragua, was appointed by Pope Francis in 2014 and would likely be seen as an extension of the current papacy.
This is an excerpt from an article written by Fox News’ Caitlin McFall
Bishop Robert Barron, renowned author, speaker, and theologian, discussed papal front-runners with EWTN on May 6.
Among the most discussed contenders to be the next pope is Pietro Parolin, the Cardinal Secretary of State of the Vatican.
“I think he’d be a steady hand. He’s the ultimate Vatican insider,” said Barron, who serves as bishop of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester in Minnesota.
While he lauded Parolin’s years of experience as a diplomat and his broad network inside the Vatican, Barron said that one reservation he had about his candidacy was Parolin’s actions towards China, saying that he has made too many concessions to the Chinese Communist Party.
Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippines, who has earned the nickname “the Asian Pope Francis,” is also seen as highly papabile.
“He’s a very charming man,” said Barron, saying that he knows him well.
“He would have the charisma is great supply. But a very emotional man, too,” Barron said, noting that Tagle would sometimes weep after delivering an impassioned speech.
Barron said that Tagle would likely be a more left-leaning pope, and his papacy would likely be a continuation of Francis’.
With several cardinals from Africa being floated as top contenders and Catholicism surging in several nations in the continent, Barron said this might be the “African moment.”
Among the most cited cardinals from Africa is Cardinal Robert Sarah of Guinea. Barron said that, while Sarah is on the older side, he is someone that he admires greatly.”
He’s a very spiritually alert man, a great writer, and someone that understands the essential elements of the Church’s life,” said Barron.
Regardless of who the conclave decide on, Barron said, “What comes first when it comes to the pope is the declaration of Jesus risen from the dead.”
Fox News’ Christian Mysliwiec contributed to this report.
Voting during the conclave is by secret ballot. According to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the cardinals participating in the election take an oath of absolute secrecy before locking themselves into the Sistine Chapel, where the voting occurs.
Voting begins the very first day of the conclave and continues as many as four times every day after, twice in the morning and twice in the evening, until one cardinal receives the necessary two-thirds majority to be elected.
Before each vote, cardinals are handed ballots on which the Latin words “Eligio in Summum Pontificem” (“I elected as the Supreme Pontiff”) are written. The cardinals write their vote on the ballot and then process to Michelangelo’s fresco of the Last Judgement, say a prayer and deposit their twice-folded ballot into a large chalice, according to an explanation by the Archdiocese of Boston.
After each round of voting, three cardinals count the votes and read the names aloud. If a two-thirds majority has not been reached, the votes are burned in a mixture of chemicals, producing black smoke, signaling a new pope has not yet been chosen.
Voting continues until a pope is finally chosen, at which point – if the candidate accepts – the votes are burned in a mixture of chemicals to produce white smoke, signaling to those assembled in St. Peter’s Square and those watching across the world that the Church has a new pope.
The chimney that will let the world know when cardinals have chosen a successor to Pope Francis was installed in early May 2025 on the roof of the Sistine Chapel.
Firefighters were seen putting up the fixture ahead of the conclave set to begin next Wednesday.
During a conclave, cardinals vote through a secret ballot. A two-thirds majority is required for the election. After each round of submissions, ballots are read aloud and then burned. The ashes are used to notify audiences around the world and onlookers in St. Peter’s Square of the election’s status.
Black smoke from the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican indicates a new round of voting is set to happen. White smoke signals a new leader of the Roman Catholic Church is selected.
This is an excerpt of an article written by Fox News’ Greg Norman.
The upcoming papal conclave has experts engaged in fervent discussion about the Catholic church’s sacred voting process will unfold
While some Vatican watchers suggest we could see a longer than usual conclave
, others have signaled they think it will be short, like it has been during the last handful of times.
“Maximum three days,” predicted Salvadoran Cardinal Gregorio Rosa Chavez. However, Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki of Cologne, Germany, said he expects the conclave “won’t go as quickly as the last conclave.”
The the diversity of this year’s conclave has also commanded attention, as well as the fact that many cardinals are unfamiliar with each other, which could lead to a lengthier vote than during recent conclaves of the past.
The vast majority of the 133 cardinal-electors will be participating in a conclave for the first time, according to Reuters, which noted around 80% of the participants were appointed by Pope Francis. Meanwhile, per the Religion News Service, this conclave’s College of Cardinals is the most geographically diverse in centuries.
“I wouldn’t panic if we don’t have a pope by the end of day two, but if there still isn’t any white smoke by the end of the third day, then we start to get worried,” said Rev. Thomas Reese, a Jesuit priest and Vatican commentator.
Mike Rowe sounds alarm over troubling new trend among working-age men
Mike Rowe, known by many as host of the popular show “Dirty Jobs” and the CEO of the MikeRoweWorks Foundation, is raising concerns about a growing segment of the U.S. population: men in their prime working years who are neither employed nor looking for work.
“There are able-bodied men in their working ages not only not working, but not looking,” Rowe said during an interview on “Varney & Co.” “That, to me, is one of the greatest alarm bells going on in the country. We’ve never seen that before, not in peacetime anyway.”
Rowe pointed to research from economist Nicholas Eberstadt in his book “Men Without Work,” who has long warned about the troubling trend. According to Eberstadt, more than 7 million men of prime working age have dropped out of the labor force entirely.
Rowe believes this problem is being made worse by a cultural overemphasis on traditional higher education, which he says steers people away from skilled trades, even as thousands of trade jobs remain unfilled.
THE AGE OF RELYING ON CREDENTIALS IS NEARING AN END, MIKE ROWE SAYS
“Compare that to the open positions, and then just sprinkle on $1.7 trillion of student loans that are still outstanding,” Rowe said. “You can see we’ve still got our thumb on the scale.”
A study from the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) supports Rowe’s concern. It found that the share of U.S.-born men aged 16 to 64 not participating in the labor force has nearly doubled over the last six decades, from 11.3% in 1960 to 22.1% in 2024.
MIKE ROWE DETAILS ‘SHIFT’ IN THE PATH TO PROSPERITY: ‘ENTERING A WHOLE NEW TIME’ OF SMART MONEY
Industries like manufacturing, maritime and automotive are feeling the impact, Rowe pointed out, struggling to fill roles that require hands-on, technical skills.
“We’re still pushing a lot of kids toward a very expensive path, while the skills gap widens,” he added. “The skills gap is real, but there’s a will gap as well.”
Rowe has long advocated for vocational training and trade careers as a viable, and often more practical, alternative to four-year degrees. He points to recent trends suggesting that younger generations may be starting to agree.
TRUMP SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER AIMED AT BOOSTING US PRESCRIPTION DRUG MANUFACTURING
“The four-year degrees are trending down in that cohort,” Rowe said, referring to Gen Z. “There’s a lot more interest in electricians, and plumbers, and steamfitters, and welders and pipefitters.”
Rowe argues that this is not only promising, but essential to the country’s long-term economic health. He urges a cultural shift: instead of pressuring every student into college, society should encourage and support those who want to pursue skilled trades.
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Bombshell report shows Trump inherited understaffed, outdated FAA from Biden admin
Many of the same Democrats slamming the Trump administration for several ongoing transportation issues were silent as the Biden administration oversaw an understaffed, outdated Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that resulted in dangerous travel conditions across the country.
Democrats like House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., have accused the Trump administration of “breaking the federal government” and having “decimated the FAA.” Jeffries blamed the Trump administration for a spate of cancellations at Newark Liberty International Airport this week.
However, a month-over-month comparison of air accidents under the Biden administration and the first few months of the Trump administration shows a significantly lower number of accidents in March and April. Throughout former President Joe Biden’s four years in office, there were an average of 115 air accidents in April. Under Trump, there were just 67 air accidents in the month of April.
A report issued by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in March shows that the Trump administration inherited an outdated system from Biden with “severe shortcomings.”
DUFFY BLASTS BIDEN, BUTTIGIEG FOR IGNORING REPORT ABOUT FAILING AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ‘DID NOTHING!’
After Trump’s return to the White House, GAO advised the administration that it had made nine recommendations to the FAA under the Biden administration that remain open, and that “urgent attention” is needed to remedy the safety issues left by Biden.
GAO said that under the Biden administration the FAA “did not prioritize or establish near-term plans to modernize unsustainable and critical systems.”
Other government reports revealed that the Biden FAA was further hindered by severe staffing issues.
A June 2023 report by the Office of the Inspector General of the Transportation Department revealed that the FAA “made limited efforts to ensure adequate controller staffing at critical air traffic control facilities.”
AMERICANS DESERVE TO HAVE A ‘STATE-OF-THE-ART’ AIR TRAVEL SYSTEM: SEAN DUFFY
The report said that “as a result, FAA continues to face staffing challenges and lacks a plan to address them, which in turn poses a risk to the continuity of air traffic operations.”
The office said it had determined that 20 of 26 (77%) critical facilities were staffed below the FAA’s 85% threshold. Even major facilities like the New York Terminal Radar Approach Control and the Miami Tower were staffed well below the threshold at just 54% and 66%, respectively.
Another report by the office released later that year said the FAA’s “lengthy hiring process and COVID-19 restrictions” slowed the agency’s onboarding and training activities, resulting in few new hires having completed their training and obtained certification.
The issues had real-world consequences. Politico reported that during January and February 2023, “commercial jets experienced close calls with other aircraft at a faster pace than they had during all of the previous five years combined.”
On Jan. 11, 2023, the FAA had to issue a nationwide ground stop due to a system outage of the aging air traffic control system. The pause was described as the first of its kind since 9/11.
The GAO’s 2025 report said the 2023 national airspace prompted an operational risk assessment, which found that of the 138 air traffic control systems, “51 (37%) were deemed unsustainable by FAA and 54 (39%) were potentially unsustainable.”
TRUMP TO REQUIRE TRUCK DRIVERS TO SPEAK ENGLISH, PASS LITERACY TESTS AS ‘COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS’ MOUNT
In 2024, the GAO found that nearly 40% of FAA control systems were still severely antiquated, requiring “urgent updates.”
“This is not a new problem,” Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy told Fox News Digital in a statement. “We’ve known this problem has existed. There have been multiple GAO reports over the last four years saying you have real problems with Air Traffic Control and you should do something with it before it actually fails. The last Administration spent $1.2 trillion. The largest infrastructure package known to man. Joe Biden signed this at this White House, and how much was spent to rebuild Air Traffic Control? $5 billion. And of the $5 billion that was given, only $1 billion was actually spent.
“The Biden Administration had made no investments in the system that we now see having issues in Newark. On top of that, they were focused on things like renaming racists roads and changing cockpit to flight deck. This Administration has come in and started looking at the Air Traffic Control system after the DCA crash. Very quickly I saw one piece of the pie where there were issues and then scratched further and there is another piece of the pie. As we looked at it, we see that the whole system needs to be redone and we need to build a brand-new air traffic control system.”
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In a Tuesday thread on X, Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, called out the FAA’s past practices and the agency’s “woke” approach.
“I started calling out the FAA’s hiring practices at Air Traffic Control an entire decade ago, pointing out that they were drifting from their longstanding pattern of hiring people with a solid math and science background and / or experience in aviation — recognizing that such people perform better in these important positions,” Lee said.
“But the ATC’s hiring decisions under Obama and later Biden prioritized basically everything else in favor of woke hiring practices,” he continued.
Fox News Digital reached out to the offices of Biden and Jeffries for comment.
Blue state gov in hot seat after parents hurt by sanctuary policies lash out
Families who lost loved ones to crimes committed by those in the country illegally took aim at sanctuary policies in Illinois and across the country at a press conference with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem Wednesday.
Among the speakers was Jim Walden, an Illinois resident who lost his son, Jimmy, several years ago in a motorcycle incident while Jimmy was stationed in Maryland.
“My son was serving in the United States Marine Corps in the intel field. He worked for the National Security Agency. Jimmy was 21 years old,” Walden said.
TRUMP SAYS MEXICAN PRESIDENT IS AFRAID OF CARTELS AFTER SHE REJECTED HIS OFFER TO SEND US TROOPS TO MEXICO
“He was hit and killed by his motorcycle by an illegal that the state of Maryland admitted they knew was illegal five years before he killed my son. And in that five-year period, they had had him in jail five times. He was convicted of domestic violence and put on probation, and he was illegal. He would have been 30 years old yesterday.
“For our governor to get on national television and say that he’s gonna stand up and protect these people is a gut punch to anybody that’s lost one,” Walden said of Gov. JB Pritzker.
“I just call on Gov. Pritzker to be a true governor and stand by the federal laws and deport every one of them, every one. I don’t care if they’re two or 20 or 80. Send them back. We have a path to citizenship. It’s called the naturalization process.”
BLUE STATE REPUBLICAN CALLS ON COUNTY SHERIFFS TO DEFY SANCTUARY LAW, DEM GOVERNOR RUMORED FOR 2028 RUN
Noem said she did the press conference there at the “direction of President Trump today to draw attention to the dangerous policies of Illinois and the Illinois governor and what he has perpetuated as far as violence and criminality against his citizens here in this state.”
President Donald Trump recently issued an executive order asking DHS and the Department of Justice to treat “sanctuary jurisdictions” as states and localities that could lose federal funding.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE IMMIGRATION COVERAGE
“Springfield needs attention specifically because of the victims that have been here, but also because of the laws that come out of this city that impact the entire state that is protecting illegal criminals and not prioritizing American citizens and the citizens of this great state,” the secretary added.
She also noted that the location of the event had a special meaning.
“But we’re standing here on this block today because this is the block where a young woman was killed just a couple of houses away from here. Emma Shafer was brutally stabbed and murdered by an illegal alien who was released into the United States by the Biden administration,” Noem explained.
Pritzker called the event a “publicity stunt” and took aim at the administration’s immigration policies.
BLUE CITY MAYOR SAYS ICE ARRESTS OF DANGEROUS CRIMINALS ARE NOT ‘FOCUSED ON MAKING US SAFER’
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“Unlike Donald Trump and Kristi Noem, Illinois follows the law,” Pritzker said in a statement about Noem’s visit. “The Trump administration is violating the United States Constitution, denying people due process and disappearing law-abiding neighbors, including children who are U.S. citizens. Yet, they are taking no real action to promote public safety and deport violent criminals within the clear and defined legal process.
“Trump-Noem publicity stunts do not make our communities safer or our immigration system smarter. Illinois doesn’t need to abuse power or ignore the Constitution to keep our people safe. Like the millions of Americans asking for sensible, humane immigration reform, I encourage the secretary to spend less time performing for Fox News and more time protecting the homeland.”
Yankee fan steals Aaron Judge home run ball from another, but regrets it soon after
A New York Yankees fan had the opportunity to go home with an awesome souvenir, but the goodness of his heart got to him.
Before the Bronx Bombers posted a 10-run seventh inning against the San Diego Padres, Aaron Judge struck with another homer, a solo shot, to cut the Yanks’ deficit to 2-1 in the bottom of the fourth inning.
A fan snagged the short-porcher in his glove and immediately celebrated with his friends.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
However, as the gang jumped up and down in jubilation, the ball slid out of the fan’s glove and rolled along the concrete on top of the right field wall.
A fan next to the group noticed, and used his quick hands to snag it and put it right in his pocket.
It’s not known how long the fan had the ball, but someone sitting next to him returned the ball later on.
Unless, the fans pulled off the ultimate ball swap.
YANKEES SCORE 10 RUNS IN 7TH, THEIR MOST IN A SINGLE INNING IN A DECADE
The Yanks scored again in the bottom of the frame, but allowed a run in the top of the seventh amid more bullpen woes.
But, in the bottom half of the seventh, the Yanks went off for their biggest inning in a decade with 10 runs that was capped off by an Austin Wells grand slam. Former Yankee Wandy Peralta was charged with six earned in his two-thirds inning of work.
As for Judge, the solo blast was his 12th of the year, which is now tied for the MLB lead along with Cal Raleigh and Kyle Schwarber.
The reigning MVP also leads the majors with a .412 batting average (the next highest is teammate Paul Goldschmidt’s .351), .503 on-base percentage, and .772 slugging percentage. He has reached base in 32 consecutive games.
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The Yanks and Padres wrap up their three-game set on Wednesday in the Bronx at 7 p.m. ET.
Nike consistently fails to protect female athletes with alleged study on trans youth
Nike loves to market itself as a champion for women. The brand has launched entire campaigns celebrating female athletes — complete with inspirational slogans, slow-mo footage and narrations about “empowerment” and proving the naysayers wrong. But behind the polished ads and performative hashtags is a pattern that’s hard to ignore: Nike consistently fails to actually protect female athletes.
This alleged study on transgender-identifying youth is just the latest example.
The sports apparel giant is reportedly funding a five-year study on trans-identifying male children who are being given puberty blockers and hormone therapy — all to see whether suppressing male puberty early enough can make competition in girls’ and women’s sports more “fair.”
But let’s call this research what it is: disturbing.
The Very Existence Of The Alleged Nike-Funded Study Proves What We Already Know
The very premise of this study is an admission that biological males have an inherent advantage over females in sports. Of course, most sane people will admit that’s common sense. That’s why we have separate men’s and women’s divisions in the first place.
RELATED: Physicians Warn of Medical Risks In Trans Youth Study Allegedly Funded By Nike
Instead of acknowledging that boys shouldn’t be competing in girls’ sports, though, this study asks, “Okay, but what if we just chemically impair them first?” It’s like asking how many dizzy bat spins we need to give Aaron Judge before he starts hitting a baseball like a high school JV player.
Except much more insidious. Horrifying. Unethical.
Nike is reportedly funding a study involving transgender-identifying youth taking puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones.
(Photo by Li Hongbo/VCG via Getty Images)
Let’s also point out what being studied. This research isn’t about female-to-male transgender athletes. Nike isn’t funding research on how girls who take testosterone fare in boys’ sports. Because they already know how that goes.
Girls aren’t taking over men’s sports and locker rooms — and no one’s pretending they are. The only group asked to compromise, accommodate and surrender safety and competitive fairness is female athletes.
And that’s been Nike’s playbook for years.
Nike Has A History Of Mistreating Female Athletes
Remember Mary Cain? An elite teenage runner, she was part of the Nike Oregon Project, founded in part by coach Alberto Salazar with the goal of making American distance runners competitive with the rest of the world.
Cain later filed a lawsuit, accusing Salazar of emotionally and physically abusing her, pushing her to become “thinner, and thinner and thinner.”
“I joined Nike because I wanted to be the best female athlete ever,” Cain told in 2019. “Instead, I was emotionally and physically abused by a system designed by Alberto and endorsed by Nike.”
Cain says she was publicly shamed, underfed and ignored when she started breaking down — physically and mentally. In her words: “I was the fastest girl in America, until I joined Nike.” According to the lawsuit, the company was aware of the abuse but failed to intervene.
“Nike was letting Alberto weight-shame women, objectify their bodies, and ignore their health and wellbeing as part of its culture,” Cain’s lawyer, Kristen West McCall, said. “This was a systemic and pervasive issue. And they did it for their own gratification and profit.”
Sound familiar?
The Nike Oregon Project was disbanded in 2019 after the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency accused Salazar of three violations. The agency banned him from the sport for four years. The Nike-sponsored coach was later barred from the sport for life after multiple athletes accused him of sexual assault.
Nike never stepped in. Real champions for women.
Nike was forced to change its maternity policy after seven-time Olympic gold medalist left the brand and publicly called Nike out.
(Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
Then there’s Allyson Felix, Alysia Montaño and Kara Goucher — world-class athletes who said Nike slashed their pay after they got pregnant. Felix asked for maternity protections. Nike not only denied her request and cut her pay by 70 percent, but an executive also reportedly told her, “Know your place and just run.”
Montaño had to keep training while hiding her pregnancy to avoid losing sponsorship.
And when Goucher got pregnant, Nike arranged a photoshoot where the company then edited out her pregnant belly and replaced it with fake abs — all while keeping her breasts, which she said had “grown significantly” during the pregnancy, as they were.
Goucher also later revealed she was pressured to race before she had healed from childbirth.
Nike eventually updated its maternity policy. But only after public shaming.
And in 2023, Nike handed a women’s sports bra endorsement to Dylan Mulvaney — a biological male with zero athletic credentials — days after Mulvaney sparked a boycott that nearly sank Bud Light. It was yet another slap in the face to female athletes: biological men modeling the gear women actually need to compete.
A costume intended to mock, not empower.
This Isn’t A One-Off — It’s A Pattern
Nike can keep churning out glittery girl-power campaigns like “So Win,” producing ads with slow-mo shots of determined women crossing finish lines and sinking threes. But throwing pink glitter on something doesn’t make it female-friendly. Especially not when, behind the scenes, the company repeatedly undermines the very athletes it claims to celebrate.
You don’t get to plaster “So Win” across billboards while funding research that asks how much we need to medically stunt boys so they can take spots on girls’ podiums. That’s not empowerment. That’s exploitation. Erasure.
This alleged study is not an outlier. It’s the logical next step in a long pattern of Nike treating women like props — useful for marketing, disposable when inconvenient.
Nike should take its own advice here.
(Photo by Natalie Behring/Getty Images)
Despite what some activists might have you believe, this transgender research isn’t some noble quest for inclusion. It’s a science experiment using kids, and its only outcome is to clear the path for males to keep entering women’s sports. There’s no upside for female athletes. No consideration for their fairness, safety or scholarship opportunities. Just more sacrifices made in the name of “progress.”
Nike doesn’t support women. It sells the illusion of support to people who don’t look too closely.