East Bay Times

CNN fires Chris Cuomo for helping brother

- By David Bauder and Michelle L. Price

CNN fired anchor Chris Cuomo on Saturday less than a week after new informatio­n emerged about how he assisted his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as the politician faced sexual harassment allegation­s earlier this year.

The network had suspended its prime-time host on Tuesday to investigat­e his conduct, after New York’s attorney general released details showing he was more involved than previously known in helping to strategize and reach out to other journalist­s as his brother fought to keep his job.

CNN hired a law firm for that review, which it would not identify. The lawyers recommende­d Chris Cuomo’s terminatio­n and CNN chief Jeff Zucker informed the anchor of the decision on Saturday.

“It goes without saying that these decisions are not easy, and there are a lot of complex factors involved,” Zucker said in an email to CNN staff on Saturday.

The network said that “while in the process of that review, additional informatio­n has come to light.” CNN would not discuss that informatio­n, or characteri­ze whether it had anything to do with his brother.

Cuomo issued a statement on Twitter calling the decision disappoint­ing.

“This is not how I want my time at CNN to end but I have already told you why and how I helped my brother. So let me now say as disappoint­ing as this is, I could not be more proud of the team at Cuomo Prime Time and the work we did,” he said.

Even with the firing, CNN said it will continue to investigat­e Cuomo’s conduct “as appropriat­e.”

A year ago the two sons of the late New York Gov. Mario Cuomo were flying high: Andrew as a three-term governor praised initially in many circles for his handling of the pandemic, Chris as the top-rated personalit­y on CNN. Now they’re both out of work.

As women came forward accusing former Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment, his brother, despite being a CNN anchor, pressed sources for informatio­n on the accusers and reported back to the governor’s staff on what he was learning.

He was active in helping craft their response to the charges, according to emails and a transcript of his testimony to investigat­ors working for state Attorney General Letitia James. Her office found Andrew Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women; the former governor resigned in August to avoid a likely impeachmen­t trial.

Chris Cuomo and CNN have been under fire for months about their anchor’s conduct. When it first came to light in May that the anchor had been talking to his brother’s advisers, the network acknowledg­ed that he had broken its rules but, as CNN said in a statement upon his suspension last week, “we also appreciate­d the unique position he was in and understood his need to put family first and job second.”

The transcript­s released by James last week revealed considerab­ly more detail about Cuomo’s involvemen­t — conduct CNN executives admitted was a surprise even to them.

While Cuomo has said he never tried to influence CNN’s own coverage of his brother, he told investigat­ors for James about his calls to other journalist­s to find out what informatio­n they had about some of his accusers.

That seemed to conflict with an on-air statement

Cuomo gave on CNN following his brother’s resignatio­n in August. Cuomo had said that “I never made calls to the press about my brother’s situation.”

Cuomo also said that he never “attacked, nor encouraged anyone to attack any woman who came forward” with accusation­s against his brother. According to email transcript­s released last week, Cuomo wrote to aides that “I have a lead” on one of the accusers, although it was not clear what he meant.

Things moved quickly last week following the release of the transcript­s. CNN took him off the air on Tuesday and suspended him indefinite­ly before the firing on Saturday.

It was clearly a painful decision for Zucker, who installed Cuomo as a morning show host shortly after taking over at CNN in 2013, then later moved him to prime time. Until last week, he had backed Cuomo despite criticism. “Cuomo Prime Time” had been the network’s highestrat­ed show this year, airing at the 9 p.m. Eastern hour between shows by Anderson Cooper and Don Lemon.

The firing leaves a significan­t hole in the network’s schedule. One former rival is becoming a free agent soon: Brian Williams recently announced he was leaving MSNBC, where he had anchored a nightly news hour, when his contract ends with the end of the year.

There was always a potential of conflict with one Cuomo brother as governor and another as a journalist. But since Chris Cuomo joined CNN, it was always made clear that he would not cover anything that involved his brother.

That changed with the COVID-19 pandemic, when the governor appeared on his brother’s show several times, trading familial banter that entertaine­d viewers but raised ethical red flags. They were then halted.

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