BY Benjamin ClarkApril 15, 2026
58 minutes ago
BY 
 | April 15, 2026
58 minutes ago

Vance tells Vatican to stay in its lane as Trump's dispute with Pope Leo XIV escalates

Vice President JD Vance dismissed the growing backlash over President Trump's public clash with Pope Leo XIV, telling Fox News late Monday that the Vatican would do well to focus on "matters of morality" and leave American policy to the president. The comments came hours after weekend negotiations with Iran in Pakistan ended without a long-term deal, and as energy prices tied to the conflict continued to squeeze American households.

Vance, a Catholic convert who has been promoting a forthcoming memoir about his faith, framed the dust-up as media overreaction to Trump's combative social-media style. The Hill reported that Vance called one of Trump's posts a "joke" and said the president later deleted an AI-generated image "because he realized that a lot of people weren't understanding his humor."

The episode traces back to Sunday, when Trump called the pope "weak on crime" in a social media post. He also shared an AI-generated image that portrayed himself as a Jesus-like figure, a move that drew criticism even from some of his own political supporters. Trump later told CBS News he thought the image portrayed him as a doctor, not a religious figure.

Vance draws a clear line between church and state

In his Fox News interview, Vance did not mince words about where the Vatican's authority ends and the president's begins. He acknowledged the pope's moral standing but argued that geopolitical strategy belongs to the elected commander in chief.

"I don't think that it's particularly newsworthy, but I certainly think that in some cases it would be best for the Vatican to stick to matters of morality, to stick to matters of what's going on in the Catholic Church and let the president of the United States stick to dictating American public policy."

That is a notable position for a man who has spoken openly about how Catholicism reshaped his life. Vance has been promoting a new memoir about his conversion to Catholicism, making his willingness to publicly push back against the head of his own church all the more pointed.

Vance also defended Trump's unfiltered approach to social media, casting it as a feature rather than a flaw.

"I think the president of the United States likes to mix it up on social media, and I actually think that's one of the good things about the president is that he's not filtered. He doesn't send everything through a communications professional. He actually reaches out directly to the people."

The Iran talks and the cost Americans are paying

Behind the headline-grabbing spat with the pope sits a harder question: the war in Iran and what it is doing to the American economy. Vance and a team of U.S. diplomats spent the weekend in Pakistan holding marathon talks with an Iranian delegation. They failed to reach a long-term agreement.

The conflict has driven up energy costs globally. Average prices of gasoline, crude oil, and fertilizer have gone "sky high" in the United States, according to the reporting. For families already stretched thin by years of inflation, those numbers land hard at the pump and the grocery store.

Pope Leo XIV had urged the U.S. and Iran to "return to the negotiating table." He also celebrated Trump's announcement of a temporary ceasefire deal earlier this month. The rare clash between the White House and the Vatican over Iran policy has added a religious dimension to what is fundamentally a debate about national security and economic pain.

Vance acknowledged that pain on Monday evening. He told Fox News the administration knows "the American people are hurting" and vowed to continue negotiations.

"I do think that we're in a place where we've accomplished our objectives, we can start to wind this thing down. I'd much rather wind this thing down with a big successful negotiation, but regardless, the president said this is not going to go on forever."

He added a further reassurance about energy costs: "That's never his intention, and I think because of that, the energy prices, while painful, are not going to be around forever."

Where the Vatican fits, and where it doesn't

The broader question raised by this episode is whether a foreign religious leader, even one as globally influential as the pope, should be weighing in on American wartime strategy. Vance's answer was clear: no.

That does not mean the Vatican is irrelevant. The Catholic Church has a long tradition of moral witness on questions of war and peace. But moral witness is different from policy prescription. When the pope tells the United States to return to the negotiating table, he is stepping onto political ground. And when the vice president, himself a practicing Catholic, tells the Vatican to stay on its side of the line, that carries weight.

Recent weeks have already seen friction between Washington and the Holy See on multiple fronts. The Vatican pushed back on media reports about a hostile Pentagon meeting, calling them "completely untrue." The pattern suggests a relationship under real strain, not just a one-off social media spat.

What remains unclear is what specific objectives Vance believes the administration has already accomplished in Iran, and what a "big successful negotiation" would look like in practice. Those details matter. Saying the conflict won't last forever is reassuring only if the off-ramp is real.

The AI image and the backlash

The AI-generated post depicting Trump as a Jesus-like figure drew the most visceral reaction. Even some of Trump's political supporters pushed back, and the president deleted the image. Trump's explanation to CBS News, that he thought it portrayed him as a doctor, raised more questions than it answered.

Vance handled it by calling it a joke and moving on. Whether that framing satisfies critics is another matter. But the vice president's broader point, that Trump communicates directly with voters, without the polish of a press shop, is hard to dispute. The question is whether that directness sometimes costs more than it gains.

What matters now

Strip away the social media noise and the real story is simpler. American families are paying more for gas and groceries because of a war that has not ended. Weekend talks in Pakistan did not produce a deal. The administration says it will keep negotiating. The pope says negotiate faster. And the vice president says the pope should mind his own business.

Vance is right that the Vatican does not set American foreign policy. But the families watching their energy bills climb don't much care who says what on social media. They care about results. The administration has promised those results are coming. Now it has to deliver.

Written by: Benjamin Clark
Benjamin Clark delivers clear, concise reporting on today’s biggest political stories.

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