Devout Roman Catholic President Biden reportedly had to delay his flight to visit Pope Francis to continue crisis talks over his deadlocked spending bill.
Biden, who keeps a picture of the pope behind his desk in the Oval Office, was due to fly to Rome early on Thursday, ready for his first meeting with the pontiff since taking office in January.
But he was forced to push back his flight by several hours to continue his crunch talks on the Capitol.
As The Post previously reported, Biden will meet with House Democrats Thursday morning in an effort to break a conference deadlock and secure a vote on a Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill.
He is then scheduled to give remarks from the White House East Room at 11:30 a.m.


Only after 12:30 p.m. — hours after initially scheduled — will he depart for his flight to the Vatican, where he is set to meet the pope on Friday.
Amid growing anger over Biden’s handling of the economy, the president had made no secret of wanting to reach an agreement on his massive social spending bill before he left for Europe.
“It’d be very, very positive to get it done before the trip,” Biden said Monday.

But as talks slogged on, administration officials began to play down the significance of Biden’s spending plan still hovering in limbo rather than being locked down.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki stressed that the president can still work the phones from Rome, suggesting Wednesday that foreign leaders can see beyond ongoing back-room talks with lawmakers back home.
Biden, the nation’s second Catholic president, is still expected to meet Friday with Francis at the Vatican.

“They will have a chance just to reflect, each of them, on their view of what’s happening in the world, policy issues,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday.
Biden will also pay a visit to the Italian hosts of the G-20 summit before he sits down with French President Emmanuel Macron, in a bid to close a rift created when the US and UK agreed to provide nuclear-powered submarines to Australia, supplanting a French contract in the process.
Biden is also expected to meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, where he is is expected to address the Iranian nuclear threat, and Iran’s announcement that it could return to talks next month in Vienna.
With Post wires