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Second Day of Papal Conclave Ends Without a New Pope

Black smoke from the Sistine Chapel signals no candidate has secured the required two-thirds majority as cardinals prepare for further voting rounds.

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Cardinals adjust their mitre hats during a final Mass celebrated by cardinals inside St. Peter's Basilica before the conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Wednesday, May 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Overview

  • Cardinals have completed two days of voting in the Sistine Chapel, with no candidate yet achieving the necessary 89 votes to become the 267th pope.
  • The conclave, the largest and most diverse in history, includes 133 cardinal-electors from roughly 70 countries, reflecting Pope Francis’s efforts to internationalize the Church.
  • Cardinals Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippines and Pietro Parolin of Italy are seen as leading contenders, though no clear front-runner has emerged.
  • Voting follows strict secrecy protocols, with cardinals sequestered and communication with the outside world entirely cut off until a decision is reached.
  • The next pope will face significant challenges, including addressing internal Church divisions, geopolitical tensions, and the global clerical sex abuse crisis.