CUOMO PROVIDED INACCURATE DATA, COVERED UP REAL FIGURES
WASHINGTON — You’ve heard the expression the coverup is worse than the crime? Well, in the case of Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the opposite might be true.
Cuomo is under bipartisan fire after an aide admitted his administration deliberately delayed releasing information showing the true extent of COVID-19 deaths in New York nursing homes, out of fears, according to the aide, the information “was going to be used against us.”
Stonewalling the Justice Department is bad enough, but Cuomo did something worse: His administration provided inaccurate data to public health officials in real time, at the beginning of the crisis, when government scientists were desperately trying to figure out how the virus was spreading, who was most vulnerable and how to stop it. Instead, the Cuomo administration provided incomplete data apparently because he feared real data would hurt him politically.
On March 25, Cuomo’s health department ordered nursing homes to accept known or suspected COVID-19 hospital patients, prohibiting facilities from requiring tests to see whether they were infectious. After a firestorm erupted, on May 3, his administration suddenly changed the way it reported nursing home COVID deaths — releasing only the number of deaths inside nursing homes, and not counting those who died after being taken to hospitals.
According to a senior Justice Department official, the administration withheld data on private nursing home deaths in New York until the final days of the Trump administration. As a result, the federal government was given bad data about the spread of the pandemic in New York. An Associated Press investigation found New York under-reported the number of recovering COVID hospital patients who were sent to nursing homes by 40%. The real number was more than 9,000 — my mother among them. And the Cuomo administration reported only 8,500 nursing home deaths, when the real number was about 15,000 — an undercount of at least 43%.
But it also impeded our public health response. We now know New York was the primary source of new infections across the United States. Genetic testing shows the outbreak in New York was seeded by travelers from Europe, and that it was the New York variant — not the West Coast variant from China — that seeded the rest of the country. The New York Times reported last year the New York variant was responsible for 70% of COVID-19 cases in Texas, 78% in Wisconsin, 80% in Alaska, 84% in Arizona and 100% in Louisiana. As Nathan Grubaugh, an epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health, told the Times, “New York was the primary gateway for the rest of the country.”
So, understanding how the virus was spreading in New York was critical to stopping it nationwide. And when Justice
Department investigators and state lawmakers began asking questions, New York delayed its answers. His administration “froze” (in the words of Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa) and withheld the real data. Only a court order and the release of a report by the New York state attorney general forced the governor to admit the true extent of the damage.
Meanwhile, he presented himself to the world as the hero of the COVID story — even publishing a book sharing his “leadership lessons.” The media played along, holding him up in contrast to President Donald Trump as an example of effective executive leadership in the face of a public health crisis. In November, he received an Emmy award in recognition of “his … use of TV to inform and calm people around the world.” No, he used TV to lie to New Yorkers and the world — and his lies cost lives.
New York lawmakers are talking about revoking Cuomo’s pandemic emergency powers. That’s a start. But Cuomo’s actions certainly merit his removal from office — not just for the coverup, but for the actions he took that impeded our national response to the worst pandemic in American history.