Archbishop call for the Resignation of Pope Fransis
The Man Who Took On Pope Francis: The Story Behind the Viganò Letter
Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò showed up 
at the Rome apartment of a conservative Vatican reporter with a simple 
clerical collar, a Rocky Mountains baseball cap and an explosive story 
to tell.
Archbishop Viganò, the 
former chief Vatican diplomat in the United States, spent the morning 
working shoulder to shoulder with the reporter at his dining room table 
on a 7,000-word letter
 that called for the resignation of Pope Francis, accusing him of 
covering up sexual abuse and giving comfort to a “homosexual current” in
 the Vatican.
The journalist, Marco 
Tosatti, said he had smoothed out the narrative. The enraged archbishop 
brought no evidence, he said, but he did supply the flair, condemning 
the homosexual networks inside the church that act “with the power of 
octopus tentacles” to “strangle innocent victims and priestly 
vocations.”
“The poetry is all his,” Mr. Tosatti said.
When
 the letter was finished, Archbishop Viganò took his leave, turning off 
his cellphone. Keeping his destination a secret because he was “worried 
for his own security,” Mr. Tosatti said, the archbishop then simply 
“disappeared.”
The letter, published on Sunday, has 
challenged Pope Francis’ papacy and shaken the Roman Catholic Church to 
its core. The pope has said he won’t dignify it with a response, yet the
 allegations have touched off an ideological civil war, with the usually
 shadowy Vatican backstabbing giving way to open combat.
The letter exposed deep ideological clashes,
 with conservatives taking up arms against Francis’ inclusive vision of a
 church that is less focused on divisive issues like abortion and 
homosexuality. But Archbishop Viganò — who himself has been accused of 
hindering a sexual misconduct investigation in Minnesota — also seems to
 be settling old scores.
As the papal ambassador, or nuncio, in 
the United States, Archbishop Viganò sided with conservative culture 
warriors and used his role in naming new bishops to put staunch 
conservatives in San Francisco, Denver and Baltimore. But he found 
himself iced out after the election of Pope Francis.
Then
 in 2015, he personally ran afoul of Francis. His decision to invite a 
staunch critic of gay rights to greet the pope in Washington during a 
visit to the United States directly challenged Francis’ inclusive 
message and prompted a controversy that nearly overshadowed the trip.
Juan Carlos Cruz, an abuse survivor with whom Francis has spoken at length, said the pope recently told him Archbishop Viganò nearly sabotaged the visit by inviting the critic, Kim Davis,
 a Kentucky county clerk who became a conservative cause célèbre when 
she refused to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
“I didn’t know 
who that woman was, and he snuck her in to say hello to me — and of 
course they made a whole publicity out of it,” Pope Francis said, 
according to Mr. Cruz.
“And I was horrified and I fired that nuncio,” Mr. Cruz recalled the pope saying.
Now, three years later, Archbishop Viganò appears to be trying to return the favor.
Known
 for his short temper and ambition, Archbishop Viganò has clashed with 
superiors who stunted his ascent in the church and has played a key role
 in some of the most stunning Vatican scandals of recent times.
![]()  | 
| Marco Tosatti, a journalist, helped Archbishop Vigano compose a letter that called for the resignation of Pope Fransis. | 
While 
Archbishop Viganò, who was once criticized by church traditionalists as 
overly pragmatic, has aligned himself with a small but influential group
 of church traditionalists who have spent years seeking to stop Francis,
 many of his critics think his personal grudges are central to his 
motivations.
After one church leader 
shipped him out of the Vatican to America, thwarting his hopes of 
receiving a scarlet cardinal’s hat, Archbishop Viganò’s private 2011 
memos — many of them deeply unflattering to the leader responsible for 
his ouster from Rome — were leaked and splashed around the globe.
Supporters
 of Archbishop Viganò, who did not return a request for comment, bristle
 at the notion that his letter calling on the pope to resign represents 
the fury of a disgruntled excellency. They portray him as principled and
 shocked by what he sees as the destruction of the church he loves.


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