Megyn Kelly issued a scathing attack on Pope Francis just hours after the Catholic Church announced his death.
The 88-year-old pontiff died of a cerebral stroke and subsequent heart failure early Monday morning, and by the afternoon, Kelly released the new episode of her podcast – in which she accused Francis of moving the Catholic Church ‘in a leftward direction’ on immigration issues.
She also blamed the late Pope for helping bring ‘illegal’ immigrants into the United States and leaving Americans to ‘deal’ with them.
‘The Church has been participating in getting immigrants here and then finding them housing and helping them stay here, irrespective of the fact that they’re here illegally,’ said Kelly, a lifelong Catholic. ‘And Pope Francis didn’t have to deal with that.
‘It’s caused a lot of us in the Catholic Church to wonder what exactly we’re donating toward on Sunday, it really does.’
She then claimed that conservative Catholics like herself have been caught in a ‘tug-of-war… between the Pope’s messaging and what he wanted us to believe were deep Catholic teachings and what we understand as Americans who have been watching our citizens murdered in the streets by these people to be true.’
According to the former Fox News host, it is one thing for the Catholic Church to want to support its priests and ensure there are ‘flowers on the altar for Easter mass,’ but ‘funding illegals coming into the country? They’re not all upstanding Catholics.’

Megyn Kelly issued a scathing attack on Pope Francis on her podcast on Monday

The 88-year-old pontiff (pictured on Thursday) died of a cerebral stroke and subsequent heart failure early Monday morning
The late Pope was known for using his pulpit to speak out against US President Donald Trump during his first term in office, particularly for his calls to build a wall between the United States and Mexico.
Francis condemned Trump’s actions towards illegal immigrants as ‘cruelty’ and a ‘grave sin’ – and even urged Catholic voters to choose ‘the lesser evil’ according to ‘his or her own conscience’ ahead of the 2024 presidential election.
More recently, the Pope blasted the Trump administration’s deportation plans – warning that they would deprive migrants of their inherent dignity.
Vice President JD Vance, in turn, tried to defend the administration’s crackdown by citing a concept from medieval Catholic theology known in Latin as ‘ordo amoris.’
He said the concept delineates a hierarchy of care- to family first, followed by neighbor, community, fellow citizens and those elsewhere.
But in a letter to US bishops on February 10, Francis appeared to correct Vance’s understanding of the concept.
‘Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extends to other persons and groups,’ he wrote.
‘The true ordo amoris that must be promoted is that which we discover by meditating constantly on the parable of the Good Samaritan, that is, by meditating on the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception.’

Just one day before his passing, the Pope met briefly with Vice President JD Vance

The Pope had been critical of the Trump administration’s actions toward migrants
Vance, who converted to Catholicism as an adult, acknowledged the Pope’s criticism – but said he will continue to defend his views.
And in an apparent effort to bury the hatchet, Vance had a brief meeting with the Pope just one day before his passing.
On her podcast on Monday, Kelly took the president’s side in the dispute, claiming Trump was ‘so devoted to getting rid of these people who Pope Francis just looked at as vulnerable and defenseless.’
‘You know who is vulnerable and defenseless?’ the podcaster asked, rhetorically. ‘Laken Riley,’ she said, referring to a Georgia nursing student who was raped and killed by migrants in the country illegally.
In the end, though, Kelly said she wished she could have discussed immigration issues with the Pope when he was still alive.

Francis made immigration issues a focal point of his time on the Holy See. He is pictured with a group of migrants taking part in a project on social integration organized by the charity Agata Smeralda in 2018
‘I’m sure he would’ve had nothing but empathy for those killed by these illegals,’ she said as she shared her desire that the next Pope is Archbishop of New York City Cardinal Timothy Dolan.
But as the Vatican’s cardinals decide on the Pope’s funeral date, Irish-American Cardinal Kevin Farrell will temporarily take over the administration of the Holy See.
Farrell, 77, who served as a bishop of the Diocese of Dallas in Texas for nearly a decade, was appointed as Vatican camerlengo, or chamberlain, by Francis in February 2019.
The camerlengo takes charge after a pontiff’s death and handles daily administration and finances of the tiny Vatican City state during the ‘interregnum’, the gap period between the leadership of one Pope to the next.
The camerlengo is also responsible for certifying the Pope’s death, announcing his passing to the world – which he did this morning – and sealing the papal apartments, as well as preparing the pontiff’s burial.

Irish-American Cardinal Kevin Farrell (pictured in 2016) will temporarily take over the administration of the Holy See
The Holy See Press Office has said Francis’s body could be transported to the Vatican Basilica as early as Wednesday morning.
But e will be buried in Rome’s Santa Maria Maggiore basilica – and not St. Peter’s Basilica as is tradition.
By doing so, Francis will become the first Pope in more than 100 years to be laid to rest outside the Vatican.
He also rejected the tradition of Popes having three coffins, instead choosing to be buried in just one.
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .