July 18, 2026

15 thoughts on “‘Thanked him for his courage’: Chicago mayor hails Pope Leo as powerful ally

  1. What stands out is the mayor said it was comforting to know that someone who comes from the city of Chicago “can speak to justice” and defend “the most vulnerable among us”. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  2. When you look at he noted the meeting underscored areas of alignment between Chicago’s policy agenda and the pope’s emphasis on social justice, particularly on the legacy of slavery and the treatment of migrants, the implications are hard to ignore.

  3. Think about it: according to Johnson, the first thing Pope Leo asked him was: “How’s. That speaks volumes.

  4. The fact that johnson, a first-term progressive Democrat leading the third-largest US city, traveled to Rome with a delegation of about 50 local officials really puts things into perspective.

  5. The bigger issue here is johnson, a first-term progressive Democrat leading the third-largest US city, traveled to Rome with a delegation of about 50 local officials. That changes the calculation.

  6. Considering johnson, a first-term progressive Democrat leading the third-largest US city, traveled to Rome with a delegation of about 50 local officials, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

  7. The fact that the mayor said it was comforting to know that someone who comes from the city of Chicago “can speak to justice” and defend “the most vulnerable among us” really puts things into perspective.

  8. Basically “We are incredibly elated and proud of him,” Johnson told the Associated Press in an interview on Friday, a day after the meeting with the American pope in a private audience. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  9. The fact that “We are incredibly elated and proud of him,” Johnson told the Associated Press in an interview on Friday, a day after the meeting with the American pope in a private audience really puts things into perspective.

  10. Think about it: johnson, a first-term progressive Democrat leading the third-largest US city, traveled to Rome with a delegation of about 50 local officials. That speaks volumes.

  11. The fact that he noted the meeting underscored areas of alignment between Chicago’s policy agenda and the pope’s emphasis on social justice, particularly on the legacy of slavery and the treatment of migrants really puts things into perspective.

  12. If “We are incredibly elated and proud of him,” Johnson told the Associated Press in an interview on Friday, a day after the meeting with the American pope in a private audience, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.

  13. Basically the mayor said it was comforting to know that someone who comes from the city of Chicago “can speak to justice” and defend “the most vulnerable among us”. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

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