News Flash

VATICAN CITY, June 2, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Pope Leo XIV on Tuesday named a
Mexico-born news executive to head up the Vatican's powerful communications
department -- the first lay woman to hold a post in the Roman Curia.
Maria Montserrat Alvarado, currently president of the Catholic media outlet
EWTN News, will take up her post on November 1, the Vatican said in a
statement.
She was born in Mexico City and studied in the United States.
Vatican News said the appointment was "continuing the path of reform and
renewal initiated by Pope Francis", Leo's predecessor.
"Alvarado is the first non-religious woman to be appointed prefect of a
dicastery of the Holy See," the Vatican news service report said.
The Dicastery for Communication oversees the Vatican's vast print, radio and
television services, which broadcast to a global audience.
It also runs the Vatican press office.
In the months before he died on April 21 last year, Francis named two nuns to
key Vatican positions and criticised a "chauvinistic mentality" within the
Catholic Church.
Sister Raffaella Petrini became president of the governorate of the Vatican
City state and Sister Simona Brambilla was named head of the Vatican
department overseeing the world's Catholic religious orders and
congregations.