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Cardinals scrutinize management of Vatican

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Like secular Italian politicians, Bertone is accused of using his position as Benedict’s right-hand man to fill Curia posts with supporters and zealously restrict access to the pope. He made himself a gatekeeper who frequently turned away visiting bishops hoping to see the pontiff, church insiders say.

All of this has tarnished the Curia, and some analysts suggest the cardinals will be interested in promoting a so-called outsider, or at least someone who appears to be an outsider.

That could point to a papal candidate from outside Italy. At the same time, some Curia old-timers may try to promote outsiders who are really insiders. For example, Brazilian Cardinal Odilo Pedro Scherer is often mentioned as a possible candidate who would pay homage to Latin America, home to nearly half the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics. But Scherer is also regarded by insiders as one of their own, given his years as a senior official in the Vatican-based Congregation for Bishops and, more recently, on the board of the scandal-plagued bank.

Benedict ordered an investigation into the leaks from his inner sanctum, a task he entrusted to three elderly cardinals. They produced a 300-page report, which Benedict apparently judged to be so explosive that he decided it should be locked away in a Vatican safe until handed over to his successor.

He did, however, authorize the three authors to brief their brethren in the meetings ahead of the conclave on the report’s contents. Some of the Curia stalwarts apparently objected, according to leaks in the Italian media, while the American cardinals and others pushed back.

The insistence by some cardinals to hear the details of the report is said to have prolonged the series of private meetings that led up to the conclave. Yet while they may agree they want a stronger manager who is also wise and holy and generous, they do not seem to have settled on a single candidate.

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“The cardinals should know what’s necessary. What’s important is to have an idea of what’s fundamental in this document,” Cardinal Raymundo Damasceno Assis of Brazil told a Sao Paulo newspaper this week. “For the moment, I’m only following it in the newspapers.”

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