Pope Leo XIV Challenges Vox on Migration as 1 Million Attend Madrid Mass
Updated
Updated · Al Jazeera English · Jun 12
Pope Leo XIV Challenges Vox on Migration as 1 Million Attend Madrid Mass
3 articles · Updated · Al Jazeera English · Jun 12
Summary
More than 1 million people attended Pope Leo XIV’s Madrid mass, where he said “no one can kneel before the Lord and despise their brother,” capping a Spain visit that directly undercut Vox’s anti-migrant politics.
In parliament and on Gran Canaria, Leo tied Catholic teaching to the dignity of migrants and the vulnerable, spotlighting a route where at least 1,214 people died or disappeared en route to the Canary Islands last year.
Vox, which has pushed “remigration” and opposed unaccompanied migrant minors, tried to downplay the message; leader Santiago Abascal said papal speeches should be separated from practical policy.
The clash lands as Spain’s politics harden around immigration: Pedro Sanchez’s government has opened a path for at least 500,000 undocumented migrants and asylum seekers to regularize their status, while PP-Vox alliances are expanding before next year’s election.
The visit also exposed a wider struggle for Catholic influence in Spain, where self-identified Catholics fell to 52.8% in 2025 even as youth identification rebounded to about 45%, making the Church’s stance politically consequential.
Could the Pope's moral challenge to Spain's far-right reshape the country's political landscape ahead of the 2027 election?
Can nationalist parties continue claiming Catholic identity while the Pope condemns their core anti-immigrant policies?
Is the Vatican's pro-migrant stance a moral imperative or a strategic pivot for its future in the Global South?
Pope Leo XIV’s 2026 Spain Visit: Faith, Migration, and the Fracturing of Traditional Political Alliances
Overview
Pope Leo XIV’s historic visit to Spain from June 6 to 12, 2026, marked his first major European trip as pontiff and involved extensive preparations, with the Archdiocese in Madrid mobilizing around 10,000 volunteers to support the event. Organizers stressed that such a large-scale visit would have been impossible without these dedicated helpers. Immediately after his initial address, Pope Leo XIV visited the 'Cedia 24 Horas' social project in Madrid’s Lucero district, a center focused on supporting vulnerable people and the homeless. This early act highlighted his commitment to compassion and set the tone for his entire visit.