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CNN executive was ousted after discussing interview topics with governor

ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2013
                                Allison Gollust, communications director for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, is shown in this photo in Albany, N.Y.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2013

Allison Gollust, communications director for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, is shown in this photo in Albany, N.Y.

On a Saturday in March 2020, as COVID-19 was invading the United States, Gov. Andrew Cuomo went on CNN for a live interview. Among other topics, he was asked about a possible government-enforced quarantine of New York that had been floated by President Donald Trump.

It was a newsworthy topic, but its path onto viewers’ screens would turn out to be controversial — and highly consequential for the future of one of the world’s most powerful news networks.

Before the interview, Cuomo had told a senior CNN executive, Allison Gollust, about subjects that he’d like to be asked about on air, according to several people familiar with the matter. Gollust, CNN’s longtime chief of communications and marketing and a former top aide of the governor, passed along the topics to CNN producers and then reported back to the governor.

“Done,” she wrote.

On Tuesday, Gollust was forced to resign from CNN after an internal investigation found a trove of written communications between her and Cuomo, including messages about the March 2020 appearance, the people said. Jeff Zucker, who at the time was CNN’s president, was aware of many of the communications between Gollust and the governor, the people said.

The episode is the latest example of how closely entwined CNN’s leadership was with one of the country’s most prominent Democratic politicians.

Producers and bookers for television news shows routinely talk with guests before their scheduled appearances and discuss questions and topics that are likely to come up on air. It is unusual, though, for a senior executive to be involved in that pre-interview process — especially when that executive previously worked for the person who’s being interviewed.

Risa Heller, a spokesperson for Gollust, said the communications with the governor were appropriate. Gollust “in no way suggested that inclusion of these topics was a condition of the interview, nor did she suggest the interview should be limited to these subjects,” Heller said.

She added: “WarnerMedia relying on this everyday practice as justification for dismissing Allison demonstrates how ignorant they are of journalistic practices, and further proves that her dismissal is nothing more than retaliation.”

CNN, whose slogan is “the most trusted name in news,” is facing mounting questions about how its senior executives and its top-rated anchor — Chris Cuomo, the governor’s younger brother — steered coverage of Andrew Cuomo, who resigned this past summer.

In a memo to employees this week, Jason Kilar, CEO of WarnerMedia, which is CNN’s parent company, wrote that Gollust was resigning after the internal investigation found unspecified “violations of company policies, including CNN’s news standards and practices,” by her, Zucker and Chris Cuomo.

Her resignation was the latest blow to CNN, which was already reeling in the wake of Zucker’s abrupt ouster two weeks earlier. Zucker said he was leaving because he had failed to disclose a romantic relationship with Gollust.

The internal review, conducted by the law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, began in the fall with an examination of allegations of workplace misconduct against Chris Cuomo.

Zucker fired Chris Cuomo in December, days after the network received a letter claiming that the anchor had years earlier sexually assaulted a woman and that he later offered to air a flattering CNN segment about her employer. The woman perceived that as an effort to buy her silence. Chris Cuomo has denied the allegations.

Chris Cuomo also came under fire for having closely advised his brother on how to fend off a sexual misconduct scandal that ultimately forced the governor to resign.

After Chris Cuomo’s departure from CNN, the Cravath review took on a life of its own, and it quickly upended the news network.

Investigators learned that Zucker and Gollust, who had worked closely together on and off for more than two decades, were having a romantic affair that had not been disclosed to human resources or other executives at WarnerMedia.

The Cravath investigators also uncovered extensive written communications between Andrew Cuomo and Gollust, who had briefly worked for the governor in late 2012 and early 2013, the people said.

It wasn’t clear what all of those communications were about.

But investigators found messages during the pandemic in which Andrew Cuomo informed Gollust about three specific subjects that he wanted to be covered during a March 28, 2020, appearance at CNN, the people said.

They said those topics included his recent phone conversation with Trump and the effect of New York being placed under lockdown.

Gollust then sent messages to CNN staff requesting that the governor be asked about those subjects.

The Cravath lawyers reviewed broadcast transcripts that showed that the anchor asked about the subjects that Gollust had put forward, the people said.

Heller, the spokesperson for Gollust, said that Gollust “acted as the principal booker for Governor Cuomo during the early days of the pandemic” and that her role was “well known by the entire network.”

It was unclear whether Zucker knew that Gollust passed on Andrew Cuomo’s request about interview topics.

A spokesperson for WarnerMedia referred The New York Times to the memo that the company sent to employees Tuesday night.

The back-to-back exits of Zucker and Gollust have raised questions about the future direction of CNN.

WarnerMedia, which is owned by AT&T, is set to be spun off and merged with Discovery Inc. in the coming months.

WarnerMedia has tried to keep a lid on the internal drama, initially remaining tight-lipped about the circumstances of Zucker’s departure and then issuing a short, vaguely worded memo Tuesday night about Gollust’s departure and unspecified journalistic lapses.

Even in conversations with CNN staff, executives and newsroom leaders have been mostly mum, to the mounting frustration of the network’s journalists and other employees.

In a pair of Zoom meetings Wednesday with CNN employees, Michael Bass and Ken Jautz, who stepped in as two of the network’s interim leaders after Zucker’s departure, said Gollust had committed serious violations of the network’s journalistic standards, four people who attended the virtual meetings said.

WarnerMedia’s top communications official, Christy Haubegger, also said in a staff meeting that Gollust’s transgressions had “to do with the Cuomos,” three people said.

When employees pressed for more details, Haubegger said she was barred from saying more.

“Actions were taken to defend the institution and the brand,” she said on the call.

Haubegger urged CNN’s public relations team to try to focus public attention on the network’s journalism, including its foreign correspondents in Ukraine covering that country’s brewing conflict with Russia.

The internal investigation’s findings are especially notable because CNN journalists have repeatedly attacked Fox News personalities like Sean Hannity for having an overly close relationship with Republican leaders, in particular Trump.

Trump, in turn, repeatedly accused CNN of being a mouthpiece for Democrats.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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