Kent Beck's book "Test-Driven Development: By Example" has an example of test-driven development of a unit test framework, so it's certainly possible to test your tests.
I haven't worked with GUIs or .NET, but what concerns do you have about your unit tests?
Are you worried that it may describe the target code as incorrect when it is functioning properly? I suppose this is a possibility, but you'd probably be able to detect that if this was happening.
Or are you concerned that it may describe the target code as functioning properly even if it isn't? If you're worried about that, then [mutation testing][1] may be what you're after. Mutation testing changes parts of code being tested, to see if those changes cause any tests to fail. If it doesn't, then either the code isn't being run, or the results of that code isn't being tested.
If mutation testing software isn't available on your system, then you could do the mutation manually, by sabotaging the target code yourself and seeing if it causes the unit tests to fail.
If you're building a suite of unit testing products that aren't tied to a particular application, then maybe you should build a trivial application that you can run your test software on and ensure it gets the failures and successes expected.
One problem with mutation testing is that it doesn't ensure that the tests cover all potential scenarios a program may encounter. Instead, it only ensures that the scenarios anticipated by the target code are all tested.
[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutation_testing mutation testing