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National Catholic Reporter names Wall St. Journal’s James Grimaldi as executive editor

National Catholic Reporter names Wall St. Journal’s James Grimaldi as executive editor


(RNS) — Ending a yearlong vacancy atop its editorial team, the National Catholic Reporter, the 60-year-old, left-leaning Catholic media outlet, announced that James V. Grimaldi, a senior writer at The Wall Street Journal, has been named executive editor. 

Grimaldi, 62, is set to begin work Sept. 16, filling a position that has been vacant since August of 2023, when Heidi Schlumpf stepped down after four years in the role, becoming a senior correspondent. Grimaldi will report directly to Joe Ferullo, the newspaper’s CEO and publisher.

In an arrangement in step with the technology-aided dislocations of modern journalism, Grimaldi will oversee the editorial operation of NCR, which is headquartered in Kansas City, from Washington, where the newspaper has offices in the historic Methodist Building on Capitol Hill. Ferullo, a retired television executive, works from Los Angeles. 

Ferullo said of Grimaldi’s appointment in a statement, “James is dedicated to NCR’s mission; he will elevate and expand NCR’s excellent journalism at a pivotal moment in the history of the Catholic Church. All of us at NCR — including our readers — look forward to his extraordinary editorial leadership in this exciting and decisive time,” Ferullo said.

In a long career that began at the San Diego Tribune, Grimaldi has become known for his accountability and investigative reporting. In more than two decades covering politics and governmental affairs at the Washington Post and the Journal, he reported on corruption by federal judges and government officials.

Grimaldi has received three Pulitzer Prizes for his investigative work. In 1996, he contributed to a Pulitzer win for the Orange County Register, reporting on unethical fertility practices by a research university. In 2006, he received a Pulitzer with two colleagues for an investigation of the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal. In 2023, while at the Journal, he won another for exposing conflicts of interest among several federal employees. 



With a staff of 40, NCR draws a million readers to its website monthly and publishes 26 print issues each year. Catholics’ options for reading about their faith and its institutions have shrunk in recent years. Diocesan newspapers, once considered essential guides to the thinking of local bishops and the national church, have in many places disappeared. In late 2022, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops shuttered domestic operations of its Catholic News Service, which now maintains only its Vatican bureau. 

NCR has been a supporter of Pope Francis, and under Schlumpf was known to criticize U.S. Catholic bishops for what the paper’s editors regarded as politically motivated decisions on topics such as denying Communion to pro-choice Democratic politicians.

From the 1980s onward, the paper was pivotal in leading the Catholic Church to confront the sexual abuse scandal, first reporting not only on abusive priests but on the U.S. bishops’ cover-up in June 1985. The news outlet has also covered mismanagement of diocesan funds and the impact of conservative donors on the U.S. church.





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