CNN let Chris Cuomo give Andrew Cuomo a propaganda platform early on during pandemic. WaPo writer points out Chris' silence now as nursing home scandal grows.



Everyone remembers CNN's Cuomo & Cuomo Happy Time segments during the early months of the coronavirus pandemic.

Host Chris Cuomo got his cable news bosses to waive the company's yearslong rule preventing him from having his brother, New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, on "Cuomo Prime Time."

What resulted was lots of free propaganda time for the governor to share his personal views on the pandemic without facing tough questions about how things were going in his state. As the virus spread across the U.S., the governor was on his brother's show at least 10 times, the Washington Post reported.

No one will forget the governor telling his kid brother that his mom made him come on the show.

Or the clever banter and fake outrage when Little Cuomo interrupted Big Cuomo.

And, of course, we'll always have the giant Q-Tip incident.

Chris Cuomo teases brother Andrew with giant test swab www.youtube.com

While Gov. Cuomo was laughing it up on his brother's cable news show, thousands of people were dying in New York nursing homes.

Those deaths are now the subject of a growing scandal surrounding the governor's office as reports have shown that not only did the governor's office order COVID-positive patients into nursing homes, but also that the governor significantly underreported the number of nursing home deaths by thousands of victims — and that his office purposefully hid the data to blunt pressure coming from the federal level and to avoid bad publicity.

Gov. Cuomo attempted Monday to shift the blame during a news conference, but not even his fellow New York Democrats in Albany are buying it.

So, how has his brother Chris covered the scandal on his CNN show?

He hasn't.

And that fact stood out to Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple.

In his column Wednesday, Wemple pointed out that on the same day that Cuomo the Governor was attempting to blame everyone else for the newest nursing home scandal-related stories coming from his office, Cuomo the Host was ignoring the news:

On his Monday night CNN program, host Chris Cuomo provided an update on the biggest story of the past year. “Now, good news: When it comes to coronavirus, we've had the best week we've seen so far, in terms of getting people vaccinated. And every week since New Year's, the rate has only improved," said the host.

Here's an update that he skipped: Just hours before “Cuomo Prime Time" aired, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo held a news conference to address his state's nursing-home scandal. Under his leadership, the state has shown a staggering lack of transparency regarding the extent of coronavirus-related deaths in New York nursing homes. ...

That story — the hottest on the covid beat on Monday — didn't make the cut on “Cuomo Prime Time." Perhaps that shouldn't be a surprise: Chris Cuomo and Andrew Cuomo are brothers, and journalists can't reliably cover their brothers.

That familial relationship would be a good explanation for Chris' decision to ignore the latest Andrew news, Wemple said, if it weren't for the fact that he had covered the governor's pandemic reaction repeatedly in what became a two-man routine that drew kudos "from all over entertainment media."

Chris himself pointed out that the brother-and-brother "news" segments were an unusual break from the ethics of the journalism industry and even admitted that he could not be objective about the governor's efforts.

Not objective but true,the facts tell the story.NY had & has its struggles but they're doing way better than what w… https://t.co/avNNDXvdru
— Christopher C. Cuomo (@Christopher C. Cuomo)1593049811.0

"Me having you on the show is an unusual thing. We've never really done it. But this was an unusual time," Chris told his brother. "I'm wowed by what you did. And, more importantly, I'm wowed by how you did it."

Yet, in these unusual times — including now, when the governor is accused of underreporting and then hiding thousands of nursing home deaths that were a result of his orders and then trying to shift the blame — Chris Cuomo can't be bothered to address what's going on in Albany, Wemple noted.

Cuomo's CNN program "brands itself as a locus of chest-beating integrity and righteousness," Wemple pointed out, but its coverage of the governor has been "asymmetrical" — "over-the-top praise when the governor is up; silence when he's down."

Wemple asked CNN about the discrepancy and received what most critics of the network would consider an unsurprising, hypocritical response:

The early months of the pandemic crisis were an extraordinary time. We felt that Chris speaking with his brother about the challenges of what millions of American families were struggling with was of significant human interest. As a result, we made an exception to a rule that we have had in place since 2013 which prevents Chris from interviewing and covering his brother, and that rule remains in place today. CNN has covered the news surrounding Governor Cuomo extensively.

Wemple noted that the statement is an example of the problem at CNN: "You can't nullify a rule when your star anchor's brother is flying high, only to invoke it during times of scandal. You just can't."

Even New York Democratic lawmakers are calling 'BS' after Gov. Cuomo's latest attempt to shift the blame in nursing home cover-up: 'Lie on top of a lie'



New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo spent a big chunk of Monday attempting to shift the blame — again — over the nursing home scandal. But not even his fellow Democrats are falling for it. Some of them are calling him a liar and pointing out his "BS" for blatantly trying to mislead New Yorkers.

What's the background?

Cuomo has been facing increased pressure about the scandal after the Associated Press revealed Thursday that thousands more coronavirus patients were sent to nursing homes than Cuomo had previously admitted.

The scandal of the admittance revelation was compounded by a New York Post report the same day that top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa admitted to state Democratic leaders that Cuomo's office hid nursing home data to blunt pressure coming from the federal level and to avoid bad publicity they knew they would get if former President Donald Trump got ahold of the information.

During a news conference in Albany Monday, Cuomo blamed nursing home staff for spreading the virus and repeated his insistence that his policy of sending coronavirus patients to nursing homes was not responsible for the wave of nursing home deaths.

Cuomo also tried to explain away what his aide had admitted and the fact that his office did not share the nursing home data publicly with lawmakers. The governor blamed a U.S. Department of Justice probe into his nursing home policy for delays in releasing the death tally, the Post noted. Cuomo claimed that his office had told state lawmakers about the probe and data delay.

Democrats call out Cuomo

New York Democratic legislators are not buying what he's selling.

Democratic state Assemblyman Ron Kim said "all of it is BS" and a cover-up, the Post reported.

"They could have given us the information back in May and June of last year. They chose not to," the lawmaker said, ignoring Cuomo's claim that the DOJ probe was the cause of the delay and instead pointing to DeRosa's admission that the governor's office hid the information over fears that "the information would be weaponized against them."

Another Democrat, state Sen. Alessandra Biaggi, said on Twitter that Cuomo was not telling the truth when he claimed he had told the legislature about the DOJ probe causing a delay in sharing the data. According to the lawmaker, she had to read about the probe in the Post.

"No, @NYGovCuomo, you did not tell the entire Senate or Assembly that there was a DOJ investigation, as the reason why you didn't share the nursing home numbers," Biaggi wrote. "I found out about a DOJ investigation with the rest of NY'ers in the @nypost story Thursday night."

No, @NYGovCuomo , you did not tell the *entire* Senate or Assembly that there was a DOJ investigation, as the reaso… https://t.co/4XHtqfYZtn
— Alessandra Biaggi (@Alessandra Biaggi)1613420429.0

Another Democratic lawmaker, Assemblywoman Yuh-Line Niou, said Cuomo was blatantly trying to mislead the public to cover up past lies.

"The legislature had no knowledge of a DOJ inquiry," Niou tweeted. "The legislature at a public hearing asked questions of the executive and of the health commissioner and then was lied to. The things said in this last press conference were frightening because for their blatant goal to mislead."

The legislature had no knowledge of a DOJ inquiry. The legislature at a public hearing asked questions of the execu… https://t.co/TYFZMiA61S
— Yuh-Line Niou (@Yuh-Line Niou)1613421738.0

Democratic state Sen. Julia Salazar backed up Biaggi's and Niou's claims and called Cuomo's claims "a lie on top of a lie" in a Twitter thread Monday afternoon.

"The Governor keeps trying to evade responsibility for his misjudgment (an understatement) in concealing the number of nursing home deaths by claiming that he'd informed the legislature. But this contradicts the point of his administration's private call with legislators last week," she wrote in response to Cuomo's presser. "If the Governor had actually informed the legislature months ago that his office was withholding the data they had on total nursing home deaths, there would've been no need for them to have a call with a group of legislators last week to inform them of this for the first time."

"Governor can claim (as he's done) that they withheld the data bc they thought it would be used against them by the DOJ(!)," she continued. "But claiming they informed the legislature is a lie on top of a lie. If he'd been honest in the first place, he may have had one bad news cycle. But now?"

She went on to blast the governor for a string of false statements and a wild claim that defied the known nature of Albany to leak secrets.

If the Governor had actually informed the legislature months ago that his office was withholding the data they had… https://t.co/vrqKdywMQ8
— Julia Salazar (@Julia Salazar)1613419937.0
Of the false statements that we’ve heard from the Governor today, the wildest one to me is that he expects us to be… https://t.co/QudGnpxaVh
— Julia Salazar (@Julia Salazar)1613422814.0

State Sen. John Liu ripped Cuomo for misleading the public and "withholding information the the public deserves to know," the Post repotted.

Liu, along with more than a dozen other New York Democratic state senators, has joined Republicans to back a bill calling for Cuomo's emergency pandemic powers to be revoked.

Gov. Cuomo blames nursing home staff for COVID-19 failures, claims he 'fully reported' deaths



New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) once again denied responsibility for the deaths of thousands of New Yorkers who contracted COVID-19 in nursing homes, blaming nursing home staff for spreading the virus and accusing people who say otherwise of creating a "toxic political environment" and spreading "conspiracy theories."

The governor spoke to the media on Monday to address reports that his administration covered-up the true coronavirus death toll in nursing homes after former President Donald Trump began pressuring them on Twitter. Last week, the New York Post published a bombshell report in which a top Cuomo aide admitted the governor's office withheld information from state lawmakers because they were afraid President Trump would tweet negatively about the governor's handling of the pandemic.

Since the report, a bipartisan group of state lawmakers have called for investigations and demanded that Cuomo's emergency powers be revoked.

"Executive powers have nothing to do with nursing homes and the legislature can overturn executive measures," Cuomo said during his news conference. "We know the virus can't be mandated within state boundaries or county boundaries. These are public health decisions, not decisions to be made for local politics. I get these are difficult decisions, but otherwise people die, and these decisions should not be politicized."

Cuomo, B.S.-ing: "I understand fully how difficult it has been, and I want to make sure people have all the facts.… https://t.co/JJ5JIsqDno
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613419188.0

Cuomo criticized a "toxic political environment" during the pandemic, accusing his critics of engaging in "political spin" to attack his administration. He laid out "facts" disputing that his administration hid COVID-19 deaths, despite a damning report from New York State Attorney General Letitia James that said Cuomo's Department of Health neglected to reveal how many nursing home residents died in hospitals, undercounting total nursing home COVID-19 deaths by up to 50%.

Cuomo goes onto say New York did a really amazing job with nursing homes while states like FL and MA were atrocious… https://t.co/g6o7qiPhfK
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613419554.0

"The DOH has always fully and publicly reported all COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes and hospitals," Cuomo said. "They have always been fully reported. Nursing homes had the most vulnerable population, we know that. Nationwide, 36% of the deaths are in nursing homes, you know what percent of the population are people in nursing homes? One percent ... New York is 34 in nursing home deaths as a percentage of total deaths. 34 out of 50 states. New York state is one of only [nine] states that counts what's called 'presumed fatalities' in nursing homes."

The governor noted that last August the Trump administration's Department of Justice requested public information on nursing homes and that the New York state legislature made a similar request.

"We paused the state legislature's request. We voluntarily complied with the DOJ request for information. Two very different things," he claimed. "Nursing homes have the most vulnerable populations, we know that!"

Taking a clear swipe at outlets like the @NYPost and people such as @JaniceDean, Cuomo claims "there is much distor… https://t.co/xdlkJT1rvQ
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613419655.0

He continued, claiming there was "much distortion" regarding his March 25, 2020, executive order to admit coronavirus patients to nursing homes to free hospital space. The Associated Press reported that more than 9,000 people with positive COVID-19 cases were released from hospitals into nursing homes under Cuomo's heavily criticized executive order, which was rescinded on May 10, 2020. The total number of seniors that died is now estimated to be over 15,000.

Cuomo mentioned that Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services guidance at the time advised states that the coronavirus patients leaving hospitals were not likely to be contagious and were to be "cohorted" in areas of nursing homes where they would be isolated from healthy residents. He added that CDC guidance said seniors should not remain in hospitals longer than necessary because of an increased risk of secondary infection, and that hospitals would be overwhelmed if patients were not removed.

Shorter Cuomo on why elderly COVID patients weren't placed in hospitals or other facilities (presumably meaning pla… https://t.co/NCcNEkptHb
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613419797.0

The governor said that of 613 New York nursing homes, 365 received a person from a hospital. Cuomo claimed that during the time his order was active, 98% of these nursing homes already had COVID-19 in their facility prior to admitting hospital patients.

Cuomo downplays the spread of coronavirus inside nursing homes, saying placing COVID patients in nursing homes didn… https://t.co/sRWnoZxgTa
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613419976.0

"COVID did not get into the nursing homes by people coming from hospitals," Cuomo asserted. "COVID got into the nursing homes by staff walking into the nursing home when they didn't know they had COVID."

More Cuomo spin: "These decisions are not political decisions. They're all made on the best information, the medica… https://t.co/gVOQzougta
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613420118.0

"These decisions are not political decisions," Cuomo said. "They're all made on the best information the medical professionals had at the time. And in New York we talk to the best experts on the globe. And I've said to the people of this state many times, nobody's been here before, nobody knows for sure — COVID is new."

Cuomo would only accept blame for failing to provide people with information sooner, saying that in the absence of reports from the state speculation led to "conspiracy theories" and "disinformation."

With yet again another implied attack on the @NYPost, Fox News, @JaniceDean, and other NYS lawmakers, Cuomo says hi… https://t.co/yzF52xZkzl
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck)1613420600.0

"The void we created by not providing information was filled with skepticism, and cynicism, and conspiracy theories which furthered the confusion," Cuomo said. "Nature abhors a vacuum. So does the political system ... The void we created allowed disinformation and that created more anxieties for the families of loved ones."

Responding to a reporter's question later, he added: "I accept responsibility for that. I am in charge. I take responsibility. We should have provided more information faster. We were too focused on doing the job and addressing the crisis and we didn't do a good enough job."

After the news conference, New York State Republican Senate Minority Leader Rob Ortt issued the following statement:

Governor Cuomo's failure to apologize this afternoon was a shocking slap in the face to the New Yorkers who have lost loved ones to COVID-19. His inability to take blame for the hurt inflicted on our families by his administration's relentless disinformation campaign is wrong on every level.

The Governor seems incapable of comprehending that it was his Administration at fault, and nobody else. He continues to shift the blame anywhere but upon himself and his top officials.

The Governor's major excuse for the failure of his Administration to provide accurate, timely information to the public was, 'We were busy.' This is a pathetic response coming from a man who had the time to publish and promote a book about his pandemic response while New Yorkers clamored for the truth.

To be clear, the Senate Republicans were never notified by the Governor's Administration regarding the Department of Justice request. People want the truth and the only way that can be provided is through investigations by the Department of Justice and the Attorney General. We know this even more now because Senate Democrats have shown they were willing partners in the lies and the coverup. For the thousands of New Yorkers who lost a cherished loved one in a nursing home, for those who can't get a vaccine because of this governor's tight fisted yet incompetent administration of vaccines, and for the professionals who felt compelled to resign from a Department of Health driven not by science but by politics, justice must be served.

Gov. Cuomo wins award for coronavirus pandemic 'leadership,' despite New York having the most COVID-19 deaths



New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo won an award for his "leadership on public safety throughout the coronavirus pandemic," despite New York having the most COVID-19 deaths in the entire country.

Cuomo, along with Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker, were the recipients of the 2020 Edward M. Kennedy Institute Award for Inspired Leadership.

"Congratulations to Governor Charlie Baker of Massachusetts and Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, the 2020 recipients of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute Award for Inspired Leadership for their nonpartisan leadership on public safety throughout the coronavirus pandemic on behalf of their respective states," the Edward M. Kennedy Institute said.

The institute stated that the award "recognizes an individual who possesses qualities that reflect the legacy of Senator Edward M. Kennedy: modeling exemplary leadership, inspiring others to action, and making a difference through service to the community and country."

The governors were presented the 2020 Edward M. Kennedy Institute Award by presidential debate moderator and NBC News White House Correspondent Kristen Welker in a virtual ceremony on Wednesday.

Massachusetts has suffered 1,626 coronavirus deaths per million people, third worst in the nation. While Cuomo's New York has 1,816 COVID-19 deaths per million people, the second worst in the United States, only trailing New Jersey. New York has the most COVID-19 deaths in the U.S., with more than 35,000, which is 11,000 more than Texas, which has the second most.

Cuomo has been widely criticized for his directive on March 25 to send coronavirus patients into nursing homes. A report from the Associated Press estimated that more than 4,500 recovering COVID-19 patients were sent to New York's already vulnerable nursing homes because of Cuomo's directive.

Cuomo finally ended the dangerous directive on May 10. By the middle of May, there were 5,800 COVID-19 deaths in nursing and adult care facilities in New York — more than in any other state.

Last month, it was announced that Cuomo won an Emmy. The governor was declared the winner of the International Emmy Founder's Award "in recognition of his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic and his masterful use of television to inform and calm people around the world."

Fox News meteorologist Janice Dean, who lost her elderly in-laws to the coronavirus in a New York City nursing home earlier this year, blasted the decision to reward Cuomo.

"It's just more grief. Every time we see this governor celebrating himself on television, it's just a reminder of the people that we lost, partly because of his leadership," Dean said.