Pope Leo issues warning on democracy after Trump criticism

Pope Leo XIV is presented with a gift during his visit to the nursing home of the Little Sisters of the Poor in Annaba, Algeria, Tuesday, April 14, 2026, on the second day of an 11-day apostolic journey to Africa. (AP)
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Updated 14 April 2026
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Pope Leo issues warning on democracy after Trump criticism

  • “Lacking this foundation, (democracy) ‌risks becoming either a majoritarian ​tyranny ‌or a ​mask for the dominance of economic and technological elites,” said Leo in the letter

ANNABA, Algeria: Pope Leo warned of the risk of democracies sliding into “majoritarian tyranny” on Tuesday, in a letter issued ​by the Vatican two days after US President Donald Trump attacked the pontiff on social media.
The pope, writing to participants of a Vatican meeting about the use of power in democratic societies, said democracies remained healthy only when they were rooted in ‌moral values.
“Lacking this foundation, (democracy) ‌risks becoming either a majoritarian ​tyranny ‌or a ​mask for the dominance of economic and technological elites,” said Leo in the letter.
The text, released as the pope was undertaking a 10-day tour of four African countries, did not directly address the US or name any specific democracies.
Trump sharply criticized Leo as “terrible,” after the ‌pope had emerged as a ‌growing critic of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
In his letter, the pope said the Catholic Church taught that ‌power could not be seen as an end in itself “but as a means ordered toward the common good.”
“This implies that the legitimacy of authority depends not on the accumulation of economic or technological strength, but on the wisdom and virtue with which it is exercised,” said Leo.
The pope also urged leaders in democratic societies to avoid any temptation to hoard power.
“Temperance ... proves essential for the legitimate use of authority, for true temperance ​restrains inordinate self-exaltation and ​acts as a guardrail against the abuse of power,” he said.