U.S. bishops elect Archbishop Paul S. Coakley as USCCB president
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Archbishop Paul S. Coakley preaches during a Mass in the Oklahoma City cathedral in 2021. / Credit: Archdiocese of Oklahoma CityBaltimore, Maryland, Nov 11, 2025 / 12:15 pm (CNA).Archbishop Paul Coakley of Oklahoma City was elected to serve as the next president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) in a secret ballot on Nov. 11.Bishops chose Bishop Daniel Flores of Brownsville, Texas, to serve as vice president. Flores, who serves in the southernmost diocese in Texas, finished second in balloting for president. Coakley subsequently won a runoff.Coakley, who was previously secretary of the USCCB, will serve a three-year term as president, succeeding the former president, Archbishop Timothy Broglio. The bishops held the election at the Fall Plenary Assembly in Baltimore.He has a history of promoting a culture of life, opposing gender ideology, and supporting migrants.The archbishop, who turned 70 years old in May, became a bishop in 2004. He has served in t...
Archbishop Paul S. Coakley preaches during a Mass in the Oklahoma City cathedral in 2021. / Credit: Archdiocese of Oklahoma City
Baltimore, Maryland, Nov 11, 2025 / 12:15 pm (CNA).
Archbishop Paul Coakley of Oklahoma City was elected to serve as the next president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) in a secret ballot on Nov. 11.
Bishops chose Bishop Daniel Flores of Brownsville, Texas, to serve as vice president. Flores, who serves in the southernmost diocese in Texas, finished second in balloting for president. Coakley subsequently won a runoff.
Coakley, who was previously secretary of the USCCB, will serve a three-year term as president, succeeding the former president, Archbishop Timothy Broglio. The bishops held the election at the Fall Plenary Assembly in Baltimore.
He has a history of promoting a culture of life, opposing gender ideology, and supporting migrants.
The archbishop, who turned 70 years old in May, became a bishop in 2004. He has served in the Oklahoma City Archdiocese since 2011. He holds a licentiate in sacred theology.
Coakley's defense of a culture of life is a continuation of Broglio's leadership on the subject. Under Broglio, the bishops maintained that abortion is the "preeminent priority" in elections.
In 2022, Coakley praised Oklahoma lawmakers "for supporting pro-life measures" following a law that banned nearly all abortions. He said, to build a culture of life, one must recognize "the inherent dignity of every person [and it] requires the protections afforded by pro-life legislation and a profound change of heart."
Coakley has criticized the Oklahoma government for its support of the death penalty. In 2022, he said: "The use of the death penalty only contributes to the continued coarsening of society and to the spiral of violence."
In 2023, he expressed concern about the rise of gender dysphoria and the promotion of gender ideology in American society. He provided advice to parents but criticized drugs and surgeries used to facilitate a gender transition.
Coakley has also criticized the mass deportation efforts taken by President Donald Trump's administration. In February of this year, he said deportations are "creating fear and even distress for our immigrant, migrant, and refugee neighbors who have arrived in search of the same dreams that awaited many of our ancestors at a different moment in time."
He also said in the statement that "illegal immigration is wrong, and renewed efforts should be considered to protect our nation's borders." He mentioned concerns about human and drug trafficking but said the majority of people who entered the country illegally "are upstanding members of our communities and churches, not violent criminals."
Flores to serve as vice president
Flores is former president of the USCCB Committee on Doctrine and was the only southern-border bishop in contention for the role of president.
Flores will serve a three-year term as vice president, succeeding the former vice president, Archbishop William Lori.
Flores, who is 64 years old, holds a doctorate in sacred theology and is a former theology professor. He has been a bishop since 2006. He was one of 12 bishops to serve on the Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod on Synodality and is a promoter of synodality in the Church.
In 2017, Flores said support for mass deportations is "formal cooperation with an intrinsic evil," similar to driving someone to an abortion clinic. He has expressed concern about polarization in the Church and urged "civil conversation … to seek what is good and make the priority how to achieve it and how to avoid what is evil."
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Bishop Mark Seitz of El Paso, Texas, speaks with EWTN News on Oct. 9, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: EWTN NewsCNA Staff, Nov 11, 2025 / 11:10 am (CNA).Legislation that would provide protections for people lacking legal immigration status won endorsement from Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas, who has served as chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on Migration.The bill (HR 4393), which would not lay out a direct path to citizenship, would give people who lack legal status the chance to earn it through labor and financial penalties if they lack a criminal record. It would apply to people who entered the United States before 2021.The measure would authorize funding for border security and create centers for asylum seekers during consideration of their case. It would require asylum cases to be completed within 60 days.Rep. María Elvira Salazar, R-Florida, sponsored the measure, which she named the Dignity Act and first introduced in 2022. Rep. Veronica ...
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null / Credit: Chodyra Mike 1/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Nov 11, 2025 / 11:40 am (CNA).An Arizona man will serve more than half a decade in prison after he carried out multiple hoax bomb threats at churches in the western U.S.The U.S. Department of Justice said in a press release that 46-year-old Phoenix resident Zimnako Salah would spend six years in prison after his 2025 conviction in the terror plot.From September to November 2023 Salah "traveled to four Christian churches in Arizona, California, and Colorado" with black backpacks, according to the Department of Justice. At two churches he was turned away by security, while at two others he "planted" the backpacks, causing congregants to believe they contained bombs, the Justice Department said.Though the planted backpacks were in fact hoaxes, Salah reportedly had "been building a bomb capable of fitting in a backpack," the department said. FBI investigators said they seized "component parts of an improvised explosive device" fr...
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null / Credit: felipe caparros/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Nov 11, 2025 / 13:44 pm (CNA).Tennessee's Catholic bishops issued a plea for mercy, calling for an immediate halt to the death penalty and its eventual abolition as the state prepares to execute Harold Wayne Nichols on Dec. 1.Tennessee's three bishops, Bishop J. Mark Spalding of Nashville, Bishop David P. Talley of Memphis, and Bishop Mark Beckman of Knoxville, as well as the Tennessee Catholic Conference issued a joint statement on Nov. 10 calling for an end to the death penalty in the state."The Catholic Church upholds the sacredness of every human life, even the life of one who is guilty of serious crimes," the bishops wrote. "To take a life in punishment denies the image of God in which every person is made. The Gospel calls not for vengeance but for mercy."The bishops acknowledged that the Church has historically recognized the state's right and duty to protect its citizens by sometimes employing the death penalty. Howe...