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U.S. President Barack Obama and Pope Francis met for the first time Thursday at Vatican City. The two world leaders greeted each other with a smile and a handshake, and posed for pictures before sitting down across a table from each other. The meeting was an opportunity for a reset of sorts between the Obama administration and Catholic leadership following several years of strained relations. The goal: focus on areas where two of the world's most influential men agree and gently tread ground where they differ. That means the President and the Pontiff will, as the White House said in a statement, focus on "shared commitment to fighting poverty and growing (income) inequality" and gingerly navigate such thornier topics as same-sex marriage, contraception and abortion. Tensions between the administration and many leaders in the American Catholic community began early in the President's tenure over his support for abortion rights. Differences over same sex-marriage only added to the tense relationship. The meeting with Pope Francis, whose approval ratings are in the high 80s, might also boost Obama in that regard. His standing with the public has hovered in the low 40s.
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