Cardinals fail to elect new Pope after third ballot
The 133 cardinals have failed to find a new pope yet as they remain locked inside the Sistine Chapel at Vatican City. See the video, photos.
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Black smoke emitted from the Sistine Chapel’s chimney at 7.50pm AEST at Vatican City after another two rounds of voting took place to elect a new pope with no success.
This means there has now been three rounds of voting among the 133 cardinals and the hunt continues to elect the 267th pontiff.
Crowds erupted as the smoke poured out of the chimney with tens of thousands people watching from inside St Peter’s Square and the streets surrounding Vatican City.
Another two rounds of voting will take place on Thursday afternoon with the Conclave now breaking for lunch.
The Vatican said voting will resume at 4pm (midnight AEST).
Black smoke signals that a new pope has not yet been elected, whereas white smoke signals that a new pontiff has been chosen.
The result came after the first ballots were lodged on Wednesday evening and it was certainly no surprise given the diverse range of 133 cardinals who come from 70 countries and are expected to have vastly different voting intentions.
Earlier, the conclave’s master of ceremonies intoned “Extra omnes” which translates from Latin to “Everybody out” before shutting the heavy doors of the 15th century chapel.
It came after the pre-conclave mass was conducted at St Peter’s Basilica.
More than a dozen names have been floated as potential papal frontrunners, but former Vatican secretary of state Pietro Parolin and Filipino Luis Antonio Tagle were holding the tightest odds with bookmakers.
The appointment of the 267th pope, following Pope Francis’s death on April 21, could take longer than the two to three day time frames in which most modern-day pontiffs have been elected.
The process has been complicated by the fact many cardinals barely know each, if at all – they are even wearing name badges to help identify themselves – and come from all over the globe.
“I don’t think there’s the slightest doubt that this is the most complicated and confused conclave of the last 50 years,” longstanding Vatican reporter Paddy Agnew, from Ireland’s Sunday Independent newspaper, said.
“Some of the cardinals are from countries that have never had a cardinal before so they don’t know their way around the conclave process, they don’t know their way around Rome, they don’t even know each other.
“They have had a week of trying to work out what their priorities are but it will take a bit of time to establish.”
Mr Agnew, who has reported on the Vatican for more than 40 years, expects the cardinals to lean towards a progressive candidate, who channels his predecessor.
“At this point with 80 per cent of the cardinals having been chosen by Francis, 80 per cent of them very much being on the same page as him, I think they will go for somebody who looks like Francis but who that somebody is – it’s a bit harder to establish with any precision,” he said.
A majority vote is required to choose the next pope – this means at least 89 votes are needed from the 133 cardinals to be successful.
Ballots began Wednesday at 4.30pm (Thursday 1.30am AEST), with one round of voting taking place on the conclave’s first day.
This will be followed by two rounds of voting each morning and afternoon (four daily) in the following days.
There will be one day’s break if a result is not reached by the weekend – Vatican sources said this will likely be on Saturday or Sunday – and then voting will resume the following day.
After every additional seven rounds of voting, if a pope is not elected, there will be another pause which will allow for prayers and informal discussions.
After 21 rounds of voting, if there is still no decision reached, there is another break and the cardinals may then only choose between two candidates who have successfully gained the most votes in the previous round.
When Pope Francis was successful at the church’s last conclave in 2013 there were 115 cardinals voting and he was selected in under two days.
The Vatican said the longest-ever conclave took place in 1274 at two years and two months to finally appoint Pope Gregory X – this is in stark contrast to in 1503 when it took just a few hours to elect Pope Julius II.
Once the new pope is successfully appointed he will be taken to the “Room of Tears” located next to the Sistine Chapel, where tailor Raniero Mancinelli, 86, has cut the robe that will welcome the new pope.
He has handmade lightweight wool cassocks, sashes and white zucchettos in three sizes to fit any pope that is chosen.
The victorious pontiff will don the outfit, then make his entrance to the world as the new leader of the Roman Catholic Church.
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Originally published as Cardinals fail to elect new Pope after third ballot