Fox News meteorologist Dean turns into fierce Cuomo critic

David Bauder and Marina Villeneuve
Associated Press

New York – To Fox News Channel’s Janice Dean, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is a liar and a criminal. He blames others for his “disastrous decisions.” He needs to resign – no, that’s not enough.

“He needs to go to jail!” she thundered on “Fox & Friends.”

Dean isn’t a political commentator – she’s Fox’s senior meteorologist. In the past year, though, a searing personal loss has transformed her into a fighter for families who believe that a Cuomo-backed policy encouraging the transfer of COVID-19 positive patients into nursing homes was a deadly error.

“She really hates when people are being screwed with and … always has fought for the little guy,” said Meghan McCain of “The View,” who once worked with Dean at Fox News.

McCain knows politics, and suggests her friend may have a future there.

Yet Dean’s advocacy raises ethical questions. She’s also made some dubious public claims about the impact of Cuomo’s nursing home order and an NBC News story.

“She is certainly a passionate and articulate spokesperson on this matter,” said Jeffrey McCall, a media ethics professor at DePauw University. “But it is also clear that Janice is using her profile as a Fox News Channel personality to engage in advocacy.”

March and April 2020 were a nightmare time in New York, with the new coronavirus spreading wildly. The timing was particularly cruel for Michael and Dolores Newman the parents of Dean’s husband, Sean. Brooklyn through and through, they were married three days before Valentine’s Day 1961.

Michael Newman, an 83-year-old former firefighter, was in a Brooklyn facility with dementia and other issues. Dolores was in assisted living on Long Island, and hoped her husband would join her when his health improved.

But he died March 29, a few hours after Sean got a call saying he wasn’t feeling well. Dolores, 79, died on April 13.

Looking into the deaths, the family was flabbergasted to learn of the Cuomo administration’s directive – five days before Michael Newman’s death – that nursing homes could not deny admission to someone solely because they had COVID-19. The policy was expanded to cover assisted living facilities six days before Dolores Newman died.

New York was desperately worried about running out of hospital space then. Cuomo insisted that CDC guidelines were being followed, and that it was wrong to discriminate against people because they had COVID.

By May, the order was rescinded. Stories have since emerged about the lengths to which Cuomo’s administration went to conceal the number of virus deaths among nursing home residents.

Putting potentially contagious patients near some of society’s oldest and most vulnerable populations made no sense to Dean.

She didn’t talk about it publicly at first. That changed last May when CNN host Chris Cuomo brandished a giant cotton swab to joke about the big nose of his brother, the governor.

“It was so tone deaf,” she said. “It was disgusting.”

She shared her anger in a text exchange with her friend Tucker Carlson and, at his invitation, went on his show the next night to tell her story.

She hasn’t stopped.

Last month she wrote a story for Fox News’ website titled, “Cuomo’s COVID nursing home policies robbed my in-laws of their 60th wedding anniversary.”

Dean, who is the weather forecaster on “Fox & Friends” and has been with the network since 2004, said her bosses have been fully supportive.

“Obviously, it’s a position that is probably a little uncomfortable for them because I’m the meteorologist and all of a sudden I’m into this role of being an advocate,” she said. “But at the end of the day, my family was affected. And I feel like that is an important role to play if there are not people that have a voice in this.”

For Fox’s audience dominated by conservatives tired of hearing criticism of then-President Donald Trump’s pandemic response, here was an issue that raised serious questions about a politician lionized by many liberals.

No one knows for sure how Dean’s in-laws caught the virus, and facilities refused to discuss the Newmans.

Dean has explicitly connected her in-law’s deaths to Cuomo’s nursing home directive. But that’s unlikely, given the disease’s usual incubation period and when they died. New research says nursing home residents are most at risk from outbreaks that staff or visitors bring inside.

Dean’s disgust with Cuomo remains while a sexual harassment scandal swirls around the governor. Last month during one of his news conferences, she kept a running commentary on Twitter, calling him a “disgrace,” a liar and “a criminal.”

A Fox News spokesperson notes that Dean is not a news reporter, and is talking about an issue that deeply affected her family. Fox likened it to Katie Couric urging people to take colon cancer tests, or Al Roker campaigning to raise diabetes awareness.

Kathleen Bartzen Culver, director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin, said those situations aren’t comparable.

“It might be wise for us to take this out of the context of Fox News and ask whether the weather personality on our local station should be calling for the arrest of our mayor,” she said. “I think that would make people profoundly uncomfortable and justifiably so.”

On. Jan. 30, Dean attacked NBC News on Twitter, saying they had “censored” a friend interviewed on the topic by making her say that New York had failed nursing home families, instead of Cuomo. But a tape of reporter Kristen Dahlgren’s interview disproves that notion, and the finished story is critical of Cuomo. Dean said the tape was doctored, but offered no evidence to back that up.

While Dean waves off thoughts of a political future, others don’t.

“The best people who go into politics come at it organically, like people that weren’t running for office their entire life,” McCain said. Dean “has this way of speaking for just average Americans that I find really compelling. I am one of the people behind the scenes that’s been encouraging her to run for office.”