No one can currently say with certainty who will be the next president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, because that role is filled only when there is a vacancy and the senior apostle (by date of ordination) is then identified and formally set apart by the First Presidency and the Twelve. Any specific prediction about “who will be next” is speculative rather than official doctrine or news.

How the president is chosen

In the modern Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles is not chosen by popular expectation, polls, or informal discussion. Instead, the position goes to the apostle who has served the longest in the Quorum (seniority based on date of ordination as an apostle). When the prior president dies or joins the First Presidency, the next most senior apostle becomes the new quorum president and is then formally set apart.

Why nobody knows “who will be next”

Because the calling is made only when there is an actual vacancy and is rooted in seniority and revelation, members and leaders avoid treating it like an election or guessing game. Health, timing of deaths, and future First Presidency reorganizations are all unknown, so trying to forecast a specific “next president” quickly turns into speculation.

What is known vs. speculation

  • What is known:
    • The governing pattern: the longest-serving apostle presides in the Quorum.
* The change happens when the current president dies or is called into the First Presidency.
  • What is speculation:
    • Naming any specific apostle as “the next president” before a vacancy exists.
    • Timelines for when such a change might happen.

Why the process matters to members

For believing Latter-day Saints, this order of succession is seen as part of a revealed pattern designed to provide stability and continuity in church leadership. It removes campaigning or ambition from the process and emphasizes long service and spiritual preparation instead of popularity.

TL;DR:
There is no publicly announced “next president” of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and church practice is that the senior apostle becomes president when a vacancy occurs, so any specific name right now would just be speculation.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.