We don’t know if the prime minister marks the Catholic box on his census form. We do know that his heritage is meaningful to him.
Albanese’s brand of cultural Catholicism harks back to an earlier Australia – but it’s also thoroughly modern | Frank Bongiorno

We don’t know if the prime minister marks the Catholic box on his census form. We do know that his heritage is meaningful to himSome observers were surprised at the depth of emotion that Anthony Albanese showed when delivering his statement responding to the death of Pope Francis. The status of Australia’s prime minister as “mourner-in-chief” is now well established but at this time of the year it is normally displayed in a rather different context – the Anzac Day ceremony.Albanese was mourning a foreign head of state but also a man recognised as a spiritual leader by Australia’s Catholics, who were a fifth of the population at the last census. We don’t know if Albanese marks that box on his census form. We do know, from things he had to say since the Pope’s death and from other statements over the years, that his Catholic heritage is meaningful to him. Continue reading...