The Morning: The pope and the president
Plus, the latest from the war in Iran.
The Morning
April 14, 2026

Good morning. The two most powerful Americans in the world — the pope and the president — are clashing.

Pope Leo looking down.
In Algiers. Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

President vs. pope

Pope Leo’s visit to Algeria today was meant to be stirring. The first member of the Order of Augustine to ascend to the papacy is visiting the place where Augustine was bishop starting in A.D. 395.

Instead, President Trump is hammering him.

Leo doesn’t like to see war in the Middle East. Trump doesn’t like other leaders criticizing him, even implicitly. After he called the pope “weak on crime” and posted an A.I. image of himself as a Jesus-like figure, he said, “I’m just responding to Pope Leo.”

The pontiff seemed unfazed. (“Too many innocent people are being killed,” he said on his way to a 10-day Africa tour. “Someone has to stand up and say there’s a better way.”) But Catholic clerics in America called on Trump to apologize. He declined.

It’s an odd conflict. The people in these two roles have generally treated each other with deference, or pretended to. What gives?

A curious tableau

A screenshot of a social media post by President Trump that contains an apparently A.I.-generated image of Trump, wearing white and red robes, touching the forehead of a man lying down in a hospital gown as several figures gaze up at Trump, including a nurse and a soldier.
Trump’s A.I. answer to Pope Leo. via Truth Social

This image Trump posted, then deleted, was especially strange, and not only because the patient in it bears a resemblance to Jon Stewart, as the late night hosts pointed out.

I asked Jason Farago, our art critic, about it:

The image — do not call it a painting — is like other works of propaganda during this second term: the ideology of Leni Riefenstahl expressed in the style of Lisa Frank. The incumbent appears as Christ the Healer. Supplicants, or their disembodied heads, ring the messiah-president like the saints and donors in an early Renaissance altarpiece; note the grizzled veteran at left, whose cap has nonsense A.I. lettering more Cyrillic than Roman.

When he took down the image, Trump said he hadn’t meant to compare himself to Jesus. “I thought it was me as a doctor,” he said.

Popes and politics

Lots of popes have waded into the political muck, as my colleague Elisabetta Povoledo reports from Rome.

  • Pope Francis, who died last year, hated poverty and climate change. He was also more compassionate about migration and homosexuality than his predecessors.
  • In 1979, John Paul II, the first Polish pope, told students in Krakow: Don’t be afraid to reject totalitarian oppression. It took 10 more years for communism there to fall.
  • Pius XII is remembered for what he didn’t say: As the pope during World War II, he avoided explicitly condemning the Nazis.

A question of stability

Where is all this rancor from the president coming from? Peter Baker, who has covered six presidencies, wrote about that yesterday:

Trump’s erratic behavior and extreme comments in recent days and weeks have turbocharged the crazy-like-a-fox-or-just-plain-crazy debate that has followed him on the national political stage for a decade.

It’s a debate you can see in the polls. A Reuters/Ipsos poll in February found that 61 percent of Americans think Trump has become more erratic with age. Just 45 percent say he is “mentally sharp and able to deal with challenges.” That’s down from 54 percent in 2023.

Trump’s language fuels the fire. “He uses more profanity, speaks longer and regularly makes comments rooted in fantasy rather than fact,” Peter writes:

He wanders off into odd tangents — an eight-minute ramble at a Christmas reception about poisonous snakes in Peru, a long digression during a cabinet meeting about Sharpie pens, an interruption of an Iran war update to praise the White House drapes. He has confused Greenland with Iceland and more than once boasted of ending a fictional war between Cambodia and Azerbaijan, two countries separated by nearly 4,000 miles. (He evidently means Armenia and Azerbaijan).

Still, part of Trump’s base loves it. A Princeton historian put this question to Peter: “What can be more anti-establishment than someone who is willing to be out of control?”

THE LATEST NEWS

War in Iran

A billboard in Iran showing the Strait of Hormuz.
A billboard in Iran showing the Strait of Hormuz, saying “Forever in Iran’s hands.” Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
  • The U.S. and Iran are trading proposals on nuclear restrictions. Iran said it could suspend its uranium enrichment for up to five years, but the Trump administration insisted on 20 years, officials from both countries said.
  • A deal on those lines would buy time, but it wouldn’t solve deeper problems, my colleagues David Sanger and Tyler Pager write.
  • Officials also said they were discussing a second round of face-to-face talks.
  • Since the U.S. has announced a blockade of Iranian ports on the Strait of Hormuz, several ships coming from Iran have still been able to cross the strait.
  • There’s little precedent for such a blockade, and the military has offered few details about its plan. John Ismay, a former naval officer, explains how it might work.
  • Many Americans have expressed bewilderment about a conflict that came with little warning.

Congress

  • Eric Swalwell, a Democratic congressman from the San Francisco Bay Area, said he’ll resign after allegations that he sexually assaulted a former staff member and engaged in misconduct with other women. He suspended his campaign to be California governor yesterday.
  • Tony Gonzales, a Republican congressman from Texas accused of having a coercive sexual relationship with a staff member who later killed herself, said he would resign as well.

More on Politics

Around the World

A person stands on a pier, looking across dark water. A city skyline is on the other side.
A pier on the Irrawaddy River, looking out toward Yangon, Myanmar.  Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

OPINIONS

Looking to pay less than $20,000 for a car? Good luck. Clifford Winston explains how cars got so expensive.

The U.S. has helped fix crises around the world. Sudan needs help now, Ann Curry writes.

Human made. Human played. 75% off.

Subscribe to New York Times Games for 75% off your first year. Our best offer is only available for a limited time. Relax and recharge with our full portfolio of games, including Wordle, Spelling Bee, Connections, the Crossword and more — all mindfully made by humans.

MORNING READS

A group of chimpanzees in a forest, with one ape baring its teeth at another.
Chimpanzees in Uganda. Aaron Sandel

Going ape: These chimps began a bloody “civil war” that has continued for years. No one knows why.

Extra syrup: Chains like Dunkin’ and Starbucks already sell more cold drinks than hot ones. Now McDonald’s is introducing fruit-flavored refresher drinks.

Two-button rule: Men are generally advised to leave open the bottom button of their suits. Why?

Your pick: The most-clicked story in The Morning yesterday was about Lauren Sánchez Bezos.

Insect carwash: A unique “choreography” between two ant species suggests a partnership in which one cleans the other.

TODAY’S NUMBER

90

— That is the number of seconds it takes the massive, revolving, two-story set of “Innocence” at the Metropolitan Opera in New York to transform, as if in a series of magic tricks, from a fancy restaurant into a school cafeteria and classroom. The size of the team that makes that possible is astonishing. Look at the pictures.

SPORTS

W.N.B.A.: The Dallas Wings selected UConn guard Azzi Fudd with the No. 1 pick in the draft, reuniting her with former Huskies teammate Paige Bueckers, the top pick in 2025.

College basketball: ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale, 86, who has battled multiple forms of cancer, announced that he has been diagnosed with melanoma.

RECIPE OF THE DAY

A basket of chicken wings.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Eric Kim’s from Atlanta, where lemon-pepper chicken wings emerged, and his recipe for them is legitimate. I cook them a little differently, though. I make a mixture of lemon pepper, cornstarch and kosher salt, then swirl some neutral oil into it to make a kin