Loyalty to family — instead of CNN — puts Cuomo at risk
NEW YORK — There’s family, and your job as a journalist. Chris Cuomo’s willingness to put the latter at risk in service to his brother has led to his suspension by CNN.
The network took him off the air Tuesday, saying that material released by New York’s attorney general shows that he played a greater role than previously acknowledged in defense of his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as he fought sexual harassment charges.
Transcripts of emails and Chris Cuomo’s testimony before state investigators revealed that he strategized regularly with the governor’s aides, and tried to help them learn what other journalists were reporting about harassment allegations.
CNN said that he was more involved than its executives — not just the general public — had been aware of.
“As a result, we have suspended Chris indefinitely, pending further evaluation,” a CNN spokesperson said.
Neither Cuomo nor the lawyer who represented him in testimony before investigators for state Attorney General Letitia James this summer returned messages seeking comment.
The Cuomos are part of a New York political dynasty that began with father, Mario, serving three terms as governor from 1982 to 1996. Andrew was in his third term before resigning earlier this year.
Andrew was his father’s most trusted aide and protector during Mario’s first campaign and early years as governor — an example of loyalty that Chris grew up watching even though, at 51, he is more than 13 years younger than his brother.
They frequently describe themselves as best friends.
“He’s my brother and I love him to death no matter what,” Chris Cuomo said in his testimony this past July. “I only got one.”
Still, they were fiercely competitive, said Michael Shnayerson, author of “The Contender,” an unauthorized biography of Andrew that was published in 2015.
“Always, under the mockery and machismo, was a powerful bond — the Cuomos against the world,” Shnayerson said.