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Herman Cain

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Herman Cain (December 13, 1945 – July 30, 2020) was an American businessman and Tea Party movement activist in the Republican Party. Cain graduated from Morehouse College with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. He then earned a master's degree in computer science at Purdue University while also working full-time for the U.S. Department of the Navy. In 1977, he joined the Pillsbury Company where he later became vice president. During the 1980s, Cain's success as a business executive at Burger King prompted Pillsbury to appoint him as chairman and CEO of Godfather's Pizza, in which capacity he worked from 1986 to 1996.

Cain was chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Omaha Branch from 1989 to 1991. He was deputy chairman, from 1992 to 1994, and then chairman until 1996, of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. In 1995, he was appointed to the Kemp Commission and, in 1996, he served as a senior economic adviser to Bob Dole's presidential campaign. From 1996 to 1999, Cain was president and CEO of the National Restaurant Association.

In May 2011, Cain announced his 2012 presidential candidacy. By the fall, his proposed 9–9–9 tax plan and debating performances had made him a serious contender for the Republican nomination. In November, however, Cain was accused of sexual harassment by multiple women. Cain denied the allegations but announced the suspension of his campaign on December 3. He remained active in the Republican Party and was a co-chairman of Black Voices for Trump in the 2020 election cycle.

Cain died from COVID-19 on July 30, 2020, at the age of 74.

Early life

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Herman Cain was born on December 13, 1945,[1] in Memphis, Tennessee, to Lenora Davis Cain (1925–1982), a cleaning woman and domestic worker, and Luther Cain (1925–2005), who was raised on a farm and worked as a barber and janitor, as well as a chauffeur for Robert W. Woodruff, the president of The Coca-Cola Company. Cain said that as he was growing up, his family was "poor but happy." Cain related that his mother taught him about her belief that "success was not a function of what you start out with materially, but what you start out with spiritually." His father worked three jobs to own his own home—which he achieved during Cain's childhood—and to allow his two sons to attend college.[2][3]

Cain grew up on the west side of Atlanta, attending S. H. Archer High School and the Rev. Cameron M. Alexander's Antioch Baptist Church North in the neighborhood now known as The Bluff. Eventually the family moved to a modest brick home on Albert Street in the Collier Heights neighborhood. He graduated from high school in 1963.[4][5]

Education and career

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In 1967, Cain graduated from Morehouse College with a Bachelor of Science in mathematics.[6] In 1971, he received a Master of Science in computer science from Purdue University,[7] while working full-time as a ballistics analyst for the U.S. Department of the Navy as a civilian.[8]

After completing his master's degree at Purdue, Cain left the Department of the Navy and began working for Coca-Cola in Atlanta as a computer systems analyst. In 1977, he moved to Minneapolis to join Pillsbury,[9][10] becoming director of business analysis[11] in its restaurant and foods group in 1978.[12][13]

Burger King and Godfather's Pizza

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At age 36, Cain was assigned to analyze and manage 400 Burger King stores in the Philadelphia area. At the time, Burger King was a Pillsbury subsidiary. Under Cain, his region posted strong improvement in three years.[9][14] According to a 1987 account in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Pillsbury's then-president Win Wallin said, "He was an excellent bet. Herman always seemed to have his act together."[12] At Burger King, Cain "established the BEAMER program, which taught our employees, mostly teenagers, how to make our patrons smile" by smiling themselves. It was a success: "Within three months of the program's initiation, the sales trend was moving steadily higher."[15]

Cain's success at Burger King prompted Pillsbury to appoint him president and CEO of another subsidiary, Godfather's Pizza. On his arrival on April 1, 1986, Cain told employees, "I'm Herman Cain and this ain't no April Fool's joke. We are not dead. Our objective is to prove to Pillsbury and everyone else that we will survive."[12] Godfather's Pizza was performing poorly, having slipped in ranks of pizza chains from third in 1985 to fifth in 1988.[9] Under Cain's leadership, Godfather's closed approximately 200 restaurants and eliminated several thousand jobs, and by doing so returned to profitability.[16] In a leveraged buyout in 1988, Cain, executive vice president and COO Ronald B. Gartlan, and a group of investors bought Godfather's from Pillsbury.[9]

Federal Reserve Bank and National Restaurant Association

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Cain in a July 1987 issue of the Minnesota Star Tribune recognizing his leadership at Godfather's Pizza

Cain served as chairman of the board of the Omaha Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City from January 1, 1989, to December 31, 1991.[17][18] He became a member of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in 1992.[17] He served as deputy chairman from January 1, 1992, to December 31, 1994, and then as its chairman until August 19, 1996,[17] when he resigned to become active in national politics.[19]

Cain left Godfather's Pizza in 1996 and moved to the District of Columbia. From 1996 to 1999 he served as CEO of the National Restaurant Association, a trade group and lobbying organization for the restaurant industry, on whose board of directors he had previously served.[20] Cain's lobbying work for the association led to a number of connections to Republican lawmakers and politicians.[16] Under Cain's leadership, the Association lobbied against increases to the minimum wage, mandatory health care benefits, regulations against smoking, and lowering the blood alcohol limit that determines whether one is driving under the influence.[21]

Cain was on the board of directors of Aquila, Inc., Nabisco, Whirlpool, Reader's Digest, and AGCO.[12][22][23]

After Cain's term with the restaurant advocacy group ended in 1999, he returned to Omaha for about a year, then moved to his hometown of Atlanta in 2000.[24]

Media work

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Cain wrote a syndicated op-ed column, which was distributed by the North Star Writers Group.[25]

Cain appeared in the 2009 documentary An Inconvenient Tax.[26] From 2008 to February 2011, Cain hosted The Herman Cain Show on Atlanta talk radio station WSB.[27][28] On January 19, 2012, Cain began working for WSB again by providing daily commentaries, while occasionally filling in for Erick Erickson and Neal Boortz.[28]

Cain took over Boortz's radio talk show on January 21, 2013, upon Boortz's retirement.[29] The show was dropped from the Westwood One Radio Network in December 2016 in favor of The Chris Plante Show, but continued to air in limited syndication through WSB's owner, Cox Radio.[30]

On February 15, 2013, Fox News Channel announced Cain would join the network as a contributor.[31] In March 2019, Cain was a panelist on a Watter's World episode.[32]

Recognition

[edit]

Cain received the 1996 Horatio Alger Award[33] and was bestowed with honorary degrees from Creighton University, Johnson & Wales University, Morehouse College, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, the New York City College of Technology, Purdue University, Suffolk University, and Tougaloo College.[22]

Then former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Jack Kemp, referred to Cain as "the Colin Powell of American capitalism". Kemp stated that Cain's "conquests won't be counted in terms of countries liberated or lives saved, but in those things that make life worth living—expanding opportunity, creating jobs and broadening horizons, not just for those he knows, but through his example, for those he'll never meet."[34]

Possible nomination to the Federal Reserve Board

[edit]

On April 4, 2019, President Donald Trump said that he intended to nominate Cain to the second of the two vacant seats on the Federal Reserve Board.[35][36] Assessing the possible nomination, news publications reviewed Cain's sexual misconduct allegations that preceded his withdrawal from the 2012 presidential election.[37][38][39] Cain acknowledged that the nomination process would be "more cumbersome" for him due to his "unusual career".[40] He initially stated that he was not considering withdrawing his name from consideration for the seat.[41] After it appeared likely that he would not receive enough votes to support his confirmation, Cain withdrew on April 22, 2019.[18][42]

Black Voices for Trump

[edit]

In the 2020 election cycle, Cain was a co-chairman of Black Voices for Trump.[43]

Political activities

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Role in the defeat of 1993 Clinton health care plan

[edit]

In 1994, as president-elect of the National Restaurant Association, Cain challenged President Bill Clinton on the costs of the employer mandate contained within the Health Security Act and criticized the effect on small businesses. Bob Cohn of Newsweek described Cain as one of the primary opponents of the plan:[44]

The Clintons would later blame "Harry and Louise," the fictional couple in the ads aired by the insurance industry, for undermining health reform. But the real saboteurs are named Herman and John. Herman Cain is the president of Godfather's Pizza and president-elect of the National Restaurant Association. An articulate entrepreneur, Cain transformed the debate when he challenged Clinton at a town meeting in Kansas City, Missouri. Cain asked the president what he was supposed to say to the workers he would have to lay off because of the cost of the "employer mandate". Clinton responded that there would be plenty of subsidies for small businessmen, but Cain persisted. "Quite honestly, your calculation is inaccurate," he told the president. "In the competitive marketplace it simply doesn't work that way."

— Bob Cohn, The Lost Chance, Newsweek

Because Kemp was impressed with Cain's performance, he chartered a plane to Nebraska to meet Cain after the debate. As a result, Cain was appointed to the Kemp Commission in 1995.[45][46][47]

Joshua Green of The Atlantic called Cain's exchange with President Clinton his "auspicious debut on the national political stage."[48]

Senior adviser to 1996 Dole campaign

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Cain was a senior economic adviser to the Bob Dole presidential campaign in 1996.[49]

2000 presidential campaign

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Cain briefly ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000. He later said in looking back at the effort that it was more about making political statements than winning the nomination. "George W. Bush was the chosen one, he had the campaign DNA that followers look for." However, Cain went on to state, "I believe that I had a better message and I believe that I was the better messenger."[50] After ending his own campaign, however, he endorsed Steve Forbes.[51]

2004 U.S. Senate campaign

[edit]

In 2004 Cain ran for the U.S. Senate in Georgia and did not win in the primaries. He was pursuing the seat that came open with the retirement of Democrat Zell Miller. Cain sought the Republican nomination, facing congressmen Johnny Isakson and Mac Collins in the primary. Collins tried to paint Cain as a moderate,[52] citing Cain's support for affirmative action programs, while Cain argued that he was a conservative, noting that he opposed the legality of abortion except when the mother's life is threatened.[53] Cain finished second in the primary with 26.2% of the vote, ahead of Collins, who won 20.6%, but because Isakson won 53.2% of the vote, Isakson was able to avoid a runoff.[54]

Americans for Prosperity and America's PAC

[edit]

Starting in 2005, Cain worked for the political advocacy group Americans for Prosperity (AFP) alongside Mark Block. Block would later become campaign manager for Cain's 2012 presidential run and would be joined in Cain's campaign by several other AFP employees. Cain continued to receive honoraria for speaking at AFP events until he announced his campaign for the Republican nomination.[55] Cain's senior economic advisor during his 2012 presidential campaign, Rich Lowrie, who helped devise Cain's 9–9–9 tax plan, had served on the AFP board.[56] In 2006, Cain voiced several radio ads encouraging people of color to vote Republican; the ads were funded by a group called America's PAC and its founder J. Patrick Rooney.[57]

2012 presidential campaign

[edit]
Cain speaking at the Ames Straw Poll in August 2011

A Tea Party activist,[58] Cain addressed numerous Tea Party rallies in 2010.[6] Following the 2010 midterm elections, Cain announced his intentions to run for president in December 2010, stating that there was a 70% chance that he would attempt to seek the office.[59] Later that month, he was the "surprise choice" for 2012 GOP nominee in a RedState reader poll.[6] Cain announced the formation of an exploratory committee on January 12, 2011,[60][61] before formally announcing his candidacy on May 21 in Atlanta.[62]

Straw poll victories

[edit]

Cain's addresses to conservative groups were well received,[63] and in late September and early October 2011, Cain won the straw polls of the Florida Republican Party, TeaCon, and the National Federation of Republican Women's Convention.[64][65] "My focus groups have consistently picked Herman Cain as the most likeable candidate in the debates," said GOP pollster Frank Luntz. "Don't underestimate the power of likability, even in a Republican primary. The more likeable the candidate, the greater the electoral potential."[64][66]

9–9–9 Plan

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In July 2011, an advisor suggested that his campaign's tax policy plan be called "the Optimal Tax", but Cain rejected the name, saying "we're just going to call it what it is: 9–9–9 Plan."[67] The plan would have replaced the then current tax code with a 9-percent business transactions tax, a 9-percent personal income tax, and a 9-percent federal sales tax. During a debate on October 12, Cain said his plan "expands the base," arguing that "when you expand the base, we can arrive at the lowest possible rate, which is 9–9–9."[68] An analysis released to Bloomberg News by the campaign claimed that the rate for each of the three taxes could in fact be as low as 7.3%, but "poverty grants"—which Cain described as a lower rate in targeted "empowerment zones"[69]—necessitated a national rate of nine percent.[68] Paul Krugman criticized the plan, saying it shifts much of the current tax burden from the rich to the poor.[70] Arthur Laffer,[67] Lawrence Kudlow,[71] the Club for Growth,[72] and Congressman Paul Ryan[73] spoke favorably of the plan. On October 21, Cain told a crowd in Detroit that the plan would be 9–0–9 for the poor, saying that "if you are at or below the poverty level ... then you don't pay that middle nine on your income."[74] Cain's 9–9–9 plan attracted skepticism from his fellow candidates at numerous Republican debates.[75]

Sexual harassment allegations

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Cain in Scottsdale, Arizona, in November 2011

In late October 2011, Politico reported that Cain had been accused by two women of sexual harassment and misconduct during his time as CEO of the National Restaurant Association in the late 1990s.[76][77] Two other women made additional harassment accusations later on. Cain acknowledged that the restaurant organization made financial settlements to the complainants. Two of the four women came forward publicly: Sharon Bialek and Karen Kraushaar.[78]

On November 28, 2011, Cain asserted that a woman named Ginger White claimed to have had an affair with him and that the allegation was not true.[79] In an interview with White, which aired on the same day, she stated that the affair lasted 13 years and ended right before Cain announced his presidential campaign.[80] On November 30, 2011, at an event in Dayton, Ohio, Cain denounced the allegations of sexual harassment and adultery.[81]

End of 2012 campaign

[edit]

On December 3, 2011, Cain suspended his campaign. The sexual harassment claims were widely considered responsible for the sharp drop in his poll numbers.[82][83]

According to a Pew Research Center report on December 21, 2011, Cain was the "most covered candidate" among the Republicans during that year.[84]

Cain's Solutions Revolution

[edit]

On January 4, 2012, Cain announced the "Cain's Solutions Revolution". Cain's stated goal was to get commitments from members of Congress to support the 9–9–9 Plan before the 2012 elections.[85] Cain stated that he started a new movement because the "biggest comment I got when I ended my candidacy was to keep 9–9–9 alive. That's what this is about, and I'm going to keep it alive with what I'm calling Cain's Solutions Revolution."[86] In order to promote this movement, Cain employed both a bus tour and a new website.[87] New York magazine stated, "It's Cain's earnest effort to keep 9–9–9 alive and focus on solutions."[88] On January 20, 2012, Cain spoke at Stephen Colbert's "Rock Me Like a Herman Cain: South Cain-Olina Primary Rally".[89] The Huffington Post reported the crowd size was between 3,000 and 5,000 people. It was described at the time as "the largest campaign rally so far during this GOP presidential primary season".[90]

State of the Union response

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For President Barack Obama's 2012 State of the Union address, the Tea Party Express chose Cain to give its second annual response.[91] After Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels gave the official GOP response,[92] Cain delivered his speech at the National Press Club.[93] The speech was streamed live on the Tea Party Express website.[92][94] Cain referred to Obama's address as a "hodgepodge of liberal ideas," adding that there were "no big ideas that would impact job growth" and "no big ideas that would stimulate economic growth in this country."[95]

Call for a third party

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Although Mitt Romney was endorsed by Cain on May 15, 2012,[96] he would eventually lose the general election to President Obama.[97] Cain then told Bryan Fischer that the Republican Party no longer represented the interests of conservatives in the United States and that it did not have "the ability to rebrand itself." He asserted that "a legitimate third party" would be needed to replace it.[98]

Personal life

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Cain married Gloria Etchison of Atlanta soon after her graduation from Morris Brown College in 1968.[99][100] They had a daughter named Melanie, a son named Vincent, and four grandchildren.[101][102]

Cain served as an associate minister at the Antioch Baptist Church North in Atlanta, which he joined at the age of 10.[103] The church is part of the National Baptist Convention[104] and is politically liberal and theologically conservative. The church's senior pastor, Rev. Cameron M. Alexander, did not share Cain's political philosophy.[105]

In 2006, Cain was diagnosed with stage IV colon cancer that had spread to his liver and was given a 30% chance of survival. After surgery and chemotherapy, the cancer was reported to be in remission.[106]

Disclosures filed during Cain's 2011 campaign categorized his wealth at that time as being between $2.9 and $6.6 million, with his combined income for both 2010 and 2011 being between $1.1 and $2.1 million.[16]

Death

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Cain and others, maskless, at the 2020 Tulsa Trump rally in June 2020

Cain opposed wearing face masks and social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.[107][108][109] He attended the Donald Trump rally in Tulsa on June 20, 2020, and was photographed not wearing a mask in a crowd of people also not wearing masks.[110] On June 29, he tested positive for COVID-19 and was admitted to a hospital in Atlanta two days later.[111] On July 2, his staff said there was "no way of knowing for sure how or where" he became infected.[111] Cain's website editor Dan Calabrese said, "I realize people will speculate about the Tulsa rally, but Herman did a lot of traveling [that] week, including to Arizona where cases [were] spiking."[43]

Cain died of COVID-19 complications at the hospital on July 30, 2020, at the age of 74.[112] His death from COVID-19 following his refusal to protect himself from it led to the creation of the Herman Cain Award subreddit, where users share news stories about people who died from COVID-19 after downplaying its deadliness or expressing doubts about the efficacy of precautions against it.[113][114] A month after his death, his official Twitter account (which had come under the control of his team and family members) posted that "it looks like the virus is not as deadly as the mainstream media first made it out to be",[115] sparking a discussion about Twitter policies for deceased account holders.[116] In her 2023 memoir Enough, former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson noted that Trump's Chief of Staff Mark Meadows remarked "we killed Herman Cain" in reference to the 2020 Tulsa rally.[117]

Bibliography

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See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Herman Cain (December 13, 1945 – July 30, 2020) was an American businessman, author, and Republican politician noted for his executive leadership at Godfather's Pizza and his 2012 presidential campaign, which featured the proposed "9-9-9" flat tax system of 9% rates on personal income, corporate profits, and new sales taxes.[1][2] Born in Memphis, Tennessee, to working-class parents, Cain rose through corporate ranks at Pillsbury to become vice president before taking the helm at the struggling Godfather's Pizza chain in 1986, where he implemented cost-cutting measures including store closures that rescued the company from bankruptcy and positioned it for acquisition by Pillsbury.[3][4] Cain's business success led to his election as president of the National Restaurant Association in 1994, a role in which he gained prominence by publicly debating Hillary Clinton on her proposed healthcare reforms, arguing against government mandates on employers.[5] Entering politics, he ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate from Georgia in 2004 and later surged in 2011 Republican primary polls with his outsider appeal and economic proposals before suspending his presidential bid in December 2011 amid revived sexual harassment allegations from his NRA tenure, which he denied and attributed to political motivations.[6] Cain continued as a conservative radio host and Trump supporter, attending a June 2020 campaign rally in Tulsa without a mask shortly before testing positive for COVID-19; he died a month later from complications of the virus at age 74, despite prior survival of stage IV colon cancer diagnosed in 2006.[7][8]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Influences

Herman Cain was born on December 13, 1945, in Memphis, Tennessee, as the elder of two sons to Luther and Lenora Cain.[1] His family relocated to Atlanta, Georgia, shortly thereafter, where he grew up in a working-class environment marked by economic constraints and the realities of segregation in the Jim Crow South.[9] The Cains resided in a government-subsidized apartment complex in downtown Atlanta before moving to a modest brick home, reflecting the limited resources available to Black families navigating poverty during that era.[10] [11] Luther Cain exemplified industriousness by juggling three jobs simultaneously—as a janitor, barber, and chauffeur—to sustain the household, while Lenora Cain contributed as a domestic worker and cleaning woman.[3] [12] These parental roles underscored a pattern of self-directed labor amid scarcity, with Luther's entrepreneurial side pursuits, such as barbering, highlighting resourcefulness without institutional crutches.[13] The family's progression from sharecropping roots to urban survival depended on such persistent effort, fostering in Cain an early recognition that economic ascent correlated directly with familial diligence rather than external interventions.[14] Cain frequently cited his parents' work ethic as the foundational influence on his worldview, crediting their example for embedding values of personal accountability and resilience that propelled his later independence.[12] This upbringing in hardship, devoid of inherited wealth or advantages, reinforced a causal understanding of opportunity as earned through individual agency, shaping his aversion to dependency models observed in his immediate surroundings.[3]

Academic Background and Early Ambitions

Cain earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, graduating in 1967.[5] He then pursued advanced studies, obtaining a master's degree in computer science from Purdue University in 1971.[5] These academic credentials established a foundation in quantitative analysis and emerging computing technologies, fields that aligned with Cain's demonstrated aptitude for problem-solving during his undergraduate years, where he ranked second in his class.[15] After completing his bachelor's degree, Cain relocated to Virginia and secured a position as a civilian mathematician and ballistic analyst with the U.S. Navy, applying his mathematical training to defense-related computations.[16] He continued this work while pursuing his graduate degree at Purdue, balancing full-time employment with rigorous coursework in computer science.[17] Upon earning his master's, Cain transitioned to the private sector as a business analyst in data processing at The Coca-Cola Company, leveraging his technical expertise to support operational efficiencies.[3] By 1977, Cain advanced into management, joining the Pillsbury Company as vice president of corporate systems and services, a role that marked his shift from technical specialist to executive oversight in information technology and strategy.[3] This progression reflected Cain's merit-driven ambitions, rooted in performance outcomes rather than external quotas, as he later attributed his rapid ascent to consistent delivery of results in competitive environments.[18]

Business Career

Initial Roles in Corporate America

Cain joined the Pillsbury Company in 1977 as a business analyst based in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[19] Within a few years, he advanced to vice president of corporate systems and services, demonstrating rapid ascent through demonstrated analytical and managerial competence in a competitive corporate environment.[3] In 1982, Cain managed the relocation of Pillsbury's headquarters to a new downtown Minneapolis facility, coordinating operational transitions amid the company's expansion in food and restaurant sectors.[19] By 1983, Cain was appointed regional vice president for Pillsbury's Burger King division in the Philadelphia area, overseeing approximately 450 to 500 stores that ranked near the bottom of the chain's 12 regions in performance metrics.[19][20] Implementing direct interventions such as staff realignments, cost optimizations, and performance-driven incentives, he reversed the region's stagnation, elevating it to a top performer in sales, profits, and growth by 1985.[19][21] This turnaround underscored the efficacy of market-responsive leadership—favoring empirical metrics and employee accountability over inertial bureaucracy—in fostering operational revival without reliance on external subsidies or regulatory crutches.[19] Cain's achievements earned internal accolades, including distribution of $50,000 performance bonuses to regional vice presidents and a three-day team cruise for the Philadelphia office in 1985, signaling corporate validation of his efficiency-focused model.[19] These early successes positioned him for subsequent high-stakes assignments, illustrating how individual initiative within incentive-aligned structures could outperform collective inertia in resource allocation and execution.[22]

Turnaround at Godfather's Pizza

In 1986, Pillsbury Company appointed Herman Cain as president and CEO of Godfather's Pizza, a chain it had acquired the previous year amid declining performance.[23][24] The brand, which had expanded rapidly in the early 1980s to over 800 locations, was facing financial distress, including persistent losses, franchisee lawsuits, an overly broad menu, inconsistent quality, and a workforce morale crisis, positioning it on the verge of bankruptcy though not formally filing.[4][25] Cain implemented aggressive cost-cutting measures, including closing approximately 200 underperforming stores, eliminating several thousand jobs through layoffs and reductions, renegotiating franchise agreements and leases, streamlining the menu, enforcing stricter quality controls, and expanding delivery services while overhauling marketing with campaigns like the "hot slice" promotion.[26][4] These steps reduced overhead and refocused operations on viable outlets, reflecting principles of resource reallocation akin to creative destruction in competitive markets rather than subsidization or regulatory intervention.[23] By mid-1987, roughly 14 months into his tenure, the chain achieved profitability, stabilizing revenues and halting the downward slide that had dropped it from third to fifth among national pizza chains.[23] In September 1988, Cain and the management team executed a leveraged buyout, purchasing Godfather's from Pillsbury at a profit for the sellers and retaining control, which allowed Cain to build personal equity in the recovered enterprise.[24] The turnaround preserved the brand's viability, sustaining around 600 locations into subsequent decades without reliance on external bailouts.[4]

Leadership in Associations and Banking

In 1994, Herman Cain was elected president of the National Restaurant Association, a trade group representing the restaurant industry, and served in that capacity until 1999, during which he expanded its lobbying influence on Capitol Hill.[27] Under his leadership, the organization advocated for deregulation to reduce burdens on small businesses, opposing federal mandates such as employer-provided health benefits and restrictions on indoor smoking, which Cain argued imposed undue costs on operators with limited margins.[28] He also lobbied against tax increases, including proposals to raise cigarette taxes that would affect restaurant revenues from smoking sections.[28] Cain testified before Congress in 1995 against minimum wage hikes, contending that such increases priced low-skilled workers out of jobs, particularly harming small businesses unable to absorb higher labor costs without reducing employment or raising prices.[29] His efforts contributed to a Republican-led Congress freezing the federal minimum wage at $5.15 per hour in 1996, a level that persisted for over a decade until 2007, which supporters credited with preserving entry-level opportunities amid economic expansion.[30] This stance aligned with Cain's broader emphasis on fiscal restraint, warning that government interventions like wage mandates distorted market incentives and stifled entrepreneurship for mom-and-pop establishments reliant on part-time, inexperienced labor.[31] From 1992 to 1996, Cain served as a director on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, rising to deputy chairman from 1992 to 1994 and chairman from 1995 to 1996, where he participated in deliberations on regional economic conditions and monetary policy implementation.[16] In this role, he brought a business perspective to discussions on inflation control and banking stability, reflecting his commitment to policies favoring low taxes and balanced federal budgets to foster private-sector growth without inflationary pressures.[32] His advocacy during this period for limiting government overreach prefigured later movements emphasizing deficit reduction and entrepreneurial freedom, influencing debates on how regulatory environments impact job creation in service industries.[30]

Media Presence and Recognition

Radio Broadcasting Career

Cain launched his radio broadcasting career in 2008 by hosting The Herman Cain Show on Atlanta's WSB-AM (750 AM), initially airing in evenings and focusing on economic liberty, free-market principles, and critiques of expansive government intervention.[33][34] The program paused in February 2011 amid his presidential exploratory efforts but resumed in a limited capacity before expanding.[35] In January 2013, Cain transitioned to WSB's morning drive slot following Neal Boortz's retirement, inheriting a nationally syndicated platform distributed by Cox Radio to approximately 120 affiliates, where he delivered unfiltered commentary on fiscal policy, national debt thresholds, and opposition to Obama administration initiatives like increased regulatory burdens on businesses.[36][37][38] His approach emphasized empirical business experience over academic theory, often citing specific data on tax inefficiencies and entitlement spending to argue for reduced federal overreach, which resonated with audiences seeking alternatives to prevailing policy narratives.[39] Syndication ended in January 2017, limiting the show to WSB and select Cox Media Group stations, though Cain continued until August 2018, when the program concluded after over five years in the morning slot.[35][40] During his radio tenure, Cain authored This Is Herman Cain!: My Journey to the White House (2011), which integrated personal anecdotes from his broadcasting platform with advocacy for limited government and individual economic empowerment.[41] The medium amplified his status as a non-traditional voice, prioritizing causal links between policy choices and real-world outcomes over ideological conformity.[18]

Awards, Honors, and Public Acclaim

In 1996, Herman Cain received the Horatio Alger Award from the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, which honors individuals who overcome adversity to achieve notable success; the award specifically recognized Cain's ascent from a working-class family in segregated Georgia—where his father held multiple jobs as a barber, janitor, and chauffeur—to becoming CEO of Godfather's Pizza after revitalizing the debt-burdened chain through aggressive restructuring.[3] Cain's business leadership also earned him induction into the Aksarben Court of Honor in 1995, in the Business & Industry category, acknowledging his role in steering Godfather's from financial distress to sustained operations as a franchise-heavy enterprise.[42] Under his direction from 1986 onward, the company—acquired by Pillsbury amid mounting losses—shed about one-third of its stores (roughly 200 locations) and trimmed administrative overhead, converting multimillion-dollar annual deficits into profitability by 1988 and facilitating a management buyout valued at approximately $100 million in assets.[4] Universities conferred multiple honorary degrees on Cain for these corporate accomplishments, including a Doctor of Science from Purdue University in 2004, reflecting his master's in computer science from the institution and subsequent executive innovations in food service analytics, and a Doctor of Science from the University of Nebraska in 1990, tied to his operational successes in the Midwest market.[22][43] Such honors underscored Cain's pre-political reputation as an exemplar of merit-based advancement, with tributes frequently referencing quantifiable turnarounds like Godfather's shift from contraction to franchise expansion under his oversight.

Political Engagement

Challenge to Clinton's Health Care Reform

In 1994, as president of the National Restaurant Association and CEO of Godfather's Pizza, Herman Cain emerged as a prominent critic of President Bill Clinton's proposed health care reform, commonly known as Hillarycare, which included employer mandates for insurance coverage.[44][45] Cain testified on the plan's projected impacts, drawing from operational data in the restaurant sector to argue that mandates would impose unsustainable cost increases on small and mid-sized businesses, leading to higher prices, reduced competitiveness, and job losses.[44] Cain presented specific figures from Godfather's Pizza, which operated 141 corporate-owned restaurants employing 3,418 workers, to illustrate the burden: annual insurance costs stood at $540,758, but the reform's requirements would elevate them to $2,196,604—a $1.7 million increase, or 3.5 times the prior premiums.[44] He contended that absorbing such hikes was infeasible given slim profit margins of about 1.5% of revenue, and passing them via 16-20% menu price increases would drive away price-sensitive customers, many of whom relied on coupons, ultimately forcing layoffs and potential closures among independent eateries.[44][46] Only about one-third of restaurant workers then had employer-provided insurance due to affordability constraints, and Cain rejected claims of government efficiency in delivery, citing the sector's high turnover (over 100% annually among young, entry-level staff) and competitive dynamics that would exacerbate mandate-driven distortions rather than expand coverage equitably.[44][46] During a televised town hall in Kansas City on April 7, 1994, Cain directly challenged Clinton, asserting the president's cost projections underestimated real-world effects and that mandates would not achieve universal coverage without harming employment in labor-intensive industries like food service.[46][45] He advocated alternatives to mandates, emphasizing market-based reforms over top-down impositions, and disputed Clinton's view that businesses could easily offset expenses through pricing, given evidence from his chain's operations showing limited pass-through feasibility.[46] This exchange, representing broader small-business concerns via the association, amplified opposition by highlighting causal risks of centralized mandates—such as inflated premiums and operational rigidity—contrasting with the plan's optimistic assumptions of seamless implementation.[45] Cain's advocacy, grounded in sector-specific empirics, helped galvanize public and congressional skepticism, contributing to the proposal's collapse later in 1994 amid Republican gains in midterm elections and widespread critique of its regulatory complexity.[45] His focus on verifiable business data over abstract policy ideals underscored failures in the reform's modeling, as projected employer burdens aligned with patterns of cost-shifting and disemployment observed in subsequent mandate analyses, though the plan's defeat averted direct testing of his forecasts.[44][46]

Advisory Positions and Initial Candidacies

In 1995, Cain was appointed to the Commission on Economic Growth and Tax Reform, chaired by Jack Kemp, which recommended replacing the federal income tax system with a flat tax to promote economic growth.[47] The following year, during the 1996 presidential election, he served as an economic adviser to Bob Dole's campaign alongside Kemp, emphasizing supply-side tax cuts to counter Democratic fiscal policies.[48] This role marked Cain's initial entry into national political advising, rooted in his advocacy for simplifying taxation to reduce government intervention in the economy. Cain briefly explored a bid for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination, viewing it as an opportunity to promote outsider perspectives on fiscal conservatism, but ultimately withdrew due to insufficient fundraising and organizational support.[49] His decision reflected a pragmatic assessment that broader name recognition and resources were needed to challenge established party figures. In 2004, Cain entered the Republican primary for the U.S. Senate seat in Georgia, campaigning against incumbent Representative Johnny Isakson and state Senator Mac Collins on a platform of fiscal restraint, tax simplification, and limited government spending.[50] He secured 170,464 votes, or 26.2 percent of the primary electorate, finishing second but failing to force a runoff.[51] The effort highlighted Cain's appeal among voters disillusioned with career politicians, though it underscored challenges in building a statewide coalition. Following his Senate bid, Cain joined Americans for Prosperity in 2005, leading its Prosperity Expansion Project to educate the public on free-market principles, including lower taxes and deregulation, without explicit partisan endorsements.[52] This non-electoral role aligned with his emphasis on grassroots advocacy over traditional political insider networks.

2012 Presidential Bid

Ascendancy and the 9-9-9 Proposal

Herman Cain formally announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination on May 21, 2011, in Atlanta, Georgia, positioning himself as a political outsider with business experience to address economic challenges. His campaign gained traction through emphasis on simple tax reform, culminating in the "9-9-9 Plan," which proposed replacing the federal income tax, payroll tax, corporate tax, and estate tax with a 9 percent flat tax on personal income, a 9 percent corporate income tax, and a 9 percent national sales tax.[53] Cain argued the plan would stimulate growth by broadening the tax base and reducing rates, though critics questioned its revenue neutrality and regressive impact on lower-income households.[54] Cain's outsider appeal and economic messaging propelled him in early straw polls, including a surprise victory in the Florida Presidency 5 Straw Poll on September 24, 2011, where he received 37 percent of 2,657 votes cast by Republican activists, surpassing Rick Perry's 15 percent and Mitt Romney's 10 percent.[55] By October 2011, national polls reflected his surge; an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll on October 12 showed him leading the field at 27 percent, ahead of Romney's 23 percent, while a CBS News/New York Times poll on October 25 had him at 25 percent to Romney's 21 percent.[56][57] This ascendancy highlighted voter frustration with establishment candidates amid economic recovery concerns post-2008 recession.

Allegations and Campaign Suspension

On October 30, 2011, Politico reported allegations from two women who claimed Cain engaged in inappropriate workplace behavior toward them during his tenure as president of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s, including one instance of a gesture suggesting a financial settlement for signing an agreement not to pursue further claims.[58] Cain denied the accusations, describing them as "totally baseless and totally false" and attributing media scrutiny to his rising popularity, while confirming a settlement payment but insisting no harassment occurred.[59] Subsequent reports emerged of additional claims, including from a third woman, though Cain maintained his innocence and no formal charges were filed.[60] The allegations eroded campaign momentum, complicating fundraising and shifting focus from policy to personal defense. On December 3, 2011, Cain suspended his bid in Atlanta, citing the "continued distraction" and harm to his family and supporters as primary reasons, while reaffirming his belief in the 9-9-9 Plan's viability and leaving open future political involvement.[61] At suspension, Cain trailed in polls behind Newt Gingrich and Romney, having peaked earlier but unable to sustain support amid the controversy.[62]

Ascendancy and the 9-9-9 Proposal

Cain's presidential campaign gained significant momentum following his victory in the Florida Republican Presidency 5 Straw Poll on September 24, 2011, where he received 37% of the vote, far surpassing competitors like Mitt Romney and Rick Perry.[2] This upset positioned him as a viable outsider candidate, appealing to voters disillusioned with establishment figures.[63] By early October 2011, Cain's national poll numbers surged, with him leading or closely competing in key surveys among Republican primary voters. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released on October 13, 2011, showed Cain ahead of Romney at 27% to 23%.[64] He also edged out competitors in an Iowa poll on October 30, 2011, reflecting his rapid ascent amid Perry's decline.[65] Cain attributed this rise to his non-political background and bold policy ideas, contrasting with career politicians.[66] Central to Cain's ascendancy was his "9-9-9" tax reform proposal, which advocated replacing the federal income tax, payroll tax, corporate income tax, and estate tax with three 9% levies: a flat personal income tax, a corporate income tax, and a national sales tax.[67] Cain first prominently outlined the plan during his campaign, gaining widespread attention after the Florida straw poll victory, as it symbolized simple, pro-growth reform.[2] He argued the plan would stimulate economic expansion by broadening the tax base and reducing rates, potentially transitioning to a consumption-based system.[53] The proposal drew praise from supporters for its straightforwardness and potential to eliminate tax loopholes, but analysts noted it would likely reduce taxes for high earners while increasing the effective burden on lower-income households due to the sales tax component.[68] Cain defended it as fair and growth-oriented, emphasizing that economic expansion under the plan would offset regressive elements through job creation and higher wages.[53] During October 2011 debates, the 9-9-9 plan became a hallmark of his messaging, contributing to his poll surge by positioning him as an innovative thinker on fiscal policy.[69]

Allegations and Campaign Suspension

In late October 2011, Politico reported that during Herman Cain's tenure as president of the National Restaurant Association from 1996 to 1999, two female employees had accused him of inappropriate workplace behavior amounting to sexual harassment, leading to settlements including one for approximately $45,000 paid to the accuser through the association's insurance.[58] [59] Cain initially described the claims as "baseless" and denied any harassment, stating he had been falsely accused, though he later acknowledged awareness of a settlement without admitting liability.[70] [71] The allegations intensified on November 7, 2011, when Sharon Bialek, a former association employee and restaurateur, publicly accused Cain of attempting to grope her in a parked car in 1997 after offering her assistance with a job, a claim Cain rejected, asserting he had no recollection of her and had never acted inappropriately.[72] [73] Further scrutiny arose on November 28, 2011, from Ginger White, who claimed a 13-year extramarital affair with Cain ending in 2011; Cain denied any romantic involvement, describing their relationship as platonic friendship and the accusation as another unsubstantiated attack.[74] [75] No criminal charges were filed, and the original complainants were bound by nondisclosure agreements, limiting public details.[59] Cain maintained throughout that all allegations were "completely false" and politically motivated distractions from his "9-9-9" economic plan, vowing in a November 8, 2011, news conference to continue his campaign unabated.[76] [77] However, the ongoing media coverage eroded his poll standings, which had peaked at the top of Republican primary fields in early November before dropping sharply.[62] On December 3, 2011, Cain suspended his 2012 presidential bid at a rally in Atlanta, citing the "distractions" from the unproven allegations as making victory unattainable, though he reiterated his innocence and left open the possibility of re-entry if exonerated.[61] [78] [79] He endorsed no immediate successor, framing the decision as prioritizing family and personal toll over prolonged defense against claims he deemed fabrications.[62]

Subsequent Political Advocacy

Following the suspension of his 2012 presidential campaign on December 3, 2011, Herman Cain sustained his involvement in Republican politics as a commentator, speaker, and fundraiser, emphasizing themes of economic reform, limited government, and individual responsibility. He leveraged his national profile to advocate for the 9-9-9 tax plan via books, such as Unleashed (published in 2011 but promoted post-campaign), and appearances at conservative events, positioning himself as a bridge between business acumen and policy critique.[80] Cain maintained political influence through the Cain Solutions Revolution super PAC, which continued operations after his candidacy ended, raising funds to support aligned conservative initiatives and candidates while promoting his policy ideas. The PAC's post-campaign expenditures, including over $30,000 on travel, meals, and entertainment between January and June 2012, prompted scrutiny from campaign finance watchdogs for potentially blurring lines between political advocacy and personal use, though no formal violations were charged.[81] In the 2016 Republican primaries, Cain endorsed Donald Trump on June 16, 2016, at a rally in Atlanta, Georgia, citing shared outsider perspectives on Washington dysfunction and commitments to tax cuts and deregulation as key alignments.[13] He became an early and consistent Trump surrogate, defending the candidate against media criticism on his radio program and Fox News contributions, and arguing that Trump's business record demonstrated superior leadership for economic recovery compared to career politicians.[82] Cain's advocacy extended into Trump's presidency; on April 4, 2019, Trump announced his intention to nominate Cain to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, lauding his private-sector experience in turning around companies like Godfather's Pizza as qualification for monetary policy input.[83] Cain withdrew from consideration on June 1, 2019, stating concerns over "likely confirmation process" hurdles, amid Senate Republican reservations tied to revived discussions of 2011 sexual harassment allegations. He remained active in pro-Trump efforts, attending the president's June 20, 2020, campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma—his last major public appearance before contracting COVID-19.[84]

Endorsement of Donald Trump

Herman Cain provided early support for Donald Trump's 2016 Republican presidential campaign, participating in a meeting with Trump and African-American pastors in October 2015 to discuss community issues.[85] By March 2016, Cain publicly urged Republican leaders to accept voter preferences regarding Trump, stating on MSNBC's Morning Joe that the party should "get over it" and let the people decide.[86] On June 16, 2016, Cain addressed Trump supporters at a rally in Atlanta, Georgia, where he explicitly endorsed Trump's candidacy, highlighting parallels to his own 2012 outsider run and emphasizing the need for bold leadership.[87] Cain defended Trump against accusations of racism, asserting in a June 15, 2016, Politico interview that "Donald Trump is not a racist," countering narratives from critics within media and political circles. Cain's endorsement extended into active surrogate roles, including vocal advocacy on radio and public platforms aligning with Trump's economic and anti-establishment messages.[84] This support persisted through Trump's presidency, as evidenced by Cain's consideration for a Federal Reserve Board nomination in April 2019, which Trump announced personally.[83] In June 2020, Cain attended Trump's campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 20, underscoring his continued alignment despite health risks.[88]

Formation of Advocacy Groups

Following the suspension of his 2012 presidential campaign on December 3, 2011, Herman Cain established Cain's Solutions Revolution on January 4, 2012, as a vehicle to perpetuate advocacy for his signature 9-9-9 economic plan comprising a 9 percent flat tax on income, corporate profits, and new sales.[89][90] Cain positioned the initiative not as a partisan super PAC but as a non-campaign entity aimed at securing public and candidate commitments to implement the plan's principles, emphasizing solutions over electoral politics.[89] He assumed the role of chief executive officer, leveraging the organization to sustain his influence in conservative policy circles amid his transition to endorsing other Republican contenders, such as Newt Gingrich.[91] The group's activities included a nationwide bus tour dubbed the "Cain Train," launched in early 2012 to rally grassroots support and pressure political figures on tax reform, drawing parallels to post-campaign tours by figures like Sarah Palin for maintaining visibility.[90] Cain's Solutions Revolution operated through affiliated entities, such as Cain Solutions, which funded its website and promotional efforts, receiving contributions from prior campaign-linked funds like Cain Connections.[92] This structure enabled Cain to extend his outsider critique of entrenched fiscal policies without direct candidacy constraints, focusing on first-principles arguments for simplifying the tax code to boost economic growth.[92] Though the initiative garnered media attention and aligned with Tea Party emphases on limited government, it did not result in widespread adoption of the 9-9-9 framework by endorsed candidates or subsequent Republican platforms, reflecting Cain's pivot to broader commentary via radio and speaking engagements.[89] The effort underscored Cain's post-candidacy strategy of influencing policy discourse through independent advocacy rather than institutional affiliations, consistent with his prior roles in groups like Americans for Prosperity, where he had promoted similar free-market ideas since 2005 but without founding authority.[52]

Core Political Philosophy

Economic Principles and Tax Reform Advocacy

Herman Cain championed free-market economics, drawing from his experience revitalizing Godfather's Pizza in the 1980s by implementing cost-cutting measures and operational efficiencies without government subsidies, which he credited for returning the chain to profitability. He argued that excessive government intervention distorts market signals and hampers private-sector innovation, advocating instead for minimal regulation to allow businesses to allocate resources efficiently based on consumer demand. Cain promoted flat tax structures to reduce economic distortions, asserting that progressive systems with high marginal rates discourage investment and labor participation by penalizing success.[93] His signature 9-9-9 proposal, outlined in 2011, envisioned a 9 percent flat tax on personal income, corporate profits, and national sales, replacing the existing federal income, payroll, corporate, and estate taxes to simplify compliance and stimulate growth through lower effective rates that would encourage capital formation.[67] Proponents, including Cain's advisor Richard Lowrie, rooted this in supply-side principles, citing historical evidence from the Reagan-era tax cuts where reductions from 70 percent top marginal rates correlated with increased GDP growth from 2.5 percent annually in the 1970s to over 4 percent in the mid-1980s.[94] Cain opposed government bailouts, such as the 2009 auto industry rescue, which he deemed the "wrong way to go" as it propped up inefficient firms at taxpayer expense rather than allowing market forces to reward viable enterprises.[95] On entitlements, he criticized their expansion as fostering dependency, proposing reforms like optional personal retirement accounts modeled on Chile's system, where individuals control investments to shift from an "entitlement society" to one of empowerment and self-reliance.[96] Central to Cain's philosophy was entrepreneurship as the primary mechanism for escaping poverty, exemplified by his own ascent from a modest upbringing in segregated Georgia to executive roles through initiative and risk-taking.[14] He contended that free markets enable job creation—citing small businesses as America's largest employer—and that policies promoting opportunity over redistribution yield measurable poverty reduction, as evidenced by U.S. entrepreneurship rates correlating with declines in poverty from 15 percent in the 1990s to under 12 percent by the early 2000s amid deregulatory efforts.[97]

Views on Government Overreach and Individual Liberty

Cain viewed expansive federal regulations as encroachments on economic freedom and constitutional boundaries, arguing that agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) imposed rules that stifled growth without verifiable environmental gains.[98][99] He criticized the EPA's proposed oversight of particulate matter, including farm dust, as emblematic of regulatory excess set to burden agriculture starting January 1, 2012, though the agency later clarified no such tightening would occur for farms.[98][100] On climate policies, Cain dismissed solar and wind power as having negligible potential for meaningful energy contributions, prioritizing domestic fossil fuel development for independence over unproven alternatives.[101][102] He advocated shifting many environmental rules to an independent commission incorporating industry stakeholders, such as oil and gas executives, to balance oversight with practical impacts.[99] In alignment with Tea Party principles, Cain framed ballooning national debt—exceeding $14 trillion by 2011—as a moral and existential peril, projecting insolvency and collapse without severe spending reductions, likening unchecked borrowing to generational theft.[103][104] He decried the federal apparatus as an "alphabet soup" of overreach hurtling toward socialism, urging citizens to reclaim sovereignty from bureaucratic proliferation.[105] Cain championed individual rights rooted in natural law, including robust Second Amendment protections as essential to self-defense and liberty, rejecting "onerous legislation" that curtailed firearm access.[106][107] He affirmed the right to bear arms as fundamental to freedom, emphasizing personal protection against threats.[108] On abortion, he declared himself "pro-life from conception, period," opposing legalization and committing to appoint judges who would restrict it, while acknowledging limited federal enforcement in cases of illegal procedures.[109][110][111] Regarding affirmative action, Cain opposed government-imposed quotas as discriminatory distortions of merit, though he allowed for contextual interpretations that avoided racial preferences, viewing such policies as undermining self-reliance.[112]

Positions on Social Issues and National Security

Cain advocated for a robust national defense posture, emphasizing deference to military commanders on troop deployments in conflict zones. In October 2011, he opposed President Obama's decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq by the end of that year, stating he would not have agreed to the pullout and criticizing it as potentially leaving a vacuum for adversaries.[113][114] He similarly faulted former President George W. Bush for setting firm withdrawal timelines in Iraq, deeming such deadlines irresponsible without reassessment based on on-the-ground conditions.[115] Cain supported the initial rationale for the Iraq War, as evidenced by his 2004 U.S. Senate campaign advertisement endorsing military action against threats like Saddam Hussein.[116] On counterterrorism measures, he endorsed warrantless wiretaps targeting suspected terrorists, even if involving Americans, prioritizing security over procedural constraints, while opposing extrajudicial assassinations of U.S. citizens without due process.[117] Regarding social issues, Cain held firmly pro-life views, asserting that life begins at conception and opposing abortion under any circumstances, including cases of rape or incest.[109][118] He supported traditional marriage as between one man and one woman, initially indicating he would not pursue a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage at the federal level but later affirming backing for such a measure to preserve the institution.[119][120] Cain championed welfare reforms centered on work requirements to foster self-reliance, citing the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act as a model that reduced dependency by tying benefits to employment efforts, which correlated with a sharp decline in welfare rolls from 12.2 million recipients in 1996 to 4.4 million by 2000.[121] He dismissed claims of systemic or institutional racism as primary explanations for socioeconomic disparities among black Americans, arguing instead that personal choices and behaviors drive outcomes, as evidenced by black economic advancements through individual initiative rather than government intervention or victimhood narratives.[122][123] In this view, while isolated racism persists, it does not constitute an insurmountable barrier, pointing to post-deregulatory eras under conservative policies that enabled black entrepreneurial gains, including his own rise from modest origins to corporate leadership without reliance on affirmative action excuses.[122]

Controversies and Scrutiny

Sexual Misconduct Claims

In October 2011, Politico reported that two former employees of the National Restaurant Association, where Herman Cain served as CEO from 1996 to 2004, had received financial settlements in the late 1990s after filing internal complaints of sexual harassment against him, with amounts later detailed as approximately $35,000 and $45,000, accompanied by nondisclosure agreements. Cain acknowledged the existence of the settlements but maintained he had no recollection of the specific allegations at the time, later clarifying that the complaints involved "some sort of settlement" without any admission of wrongdoing by him or the organization, describing the process as standard human resources protocol to resolve disputes.[71][124] He consistently denied engaging in harassment, stating the claims were baseless and that he had never sexually harassed anyone.[125] One of the initial anonymous accusers was identified as Karen Kraushaar, whose 1998 settlement followed complaints of inappropriate comments and gestures; she later filed a separate internal grievance alleging pay discrimination at her subsequent employer in 2002, though no legal findings substantiated harassment in either case.[126] In November 2011, Sharon Bialek publicly accused Cain of groping her in a Washington, D.C., hotel room in 1997 after a fundraising dinner, prompting Cain to deny any recollection of the encounter or misconduct, asserting the allegation "simply didn't happen" and offering to submit to a polygraph test while challenging accusers to do the same.[127][128] Later that month, Ginger White claimed a 13-year extramarital affair with Cain ending in mid-2011, which he denied as romantic, describing their relationship as platonic friendship with financial assistance but no sexual involvement.[129] No criminal charges or civil lawsuits were ever filed against Cain regarding these unadjudicated claims, which relied solely on accusers' retrospective accounts without contemporaneous corroboration such as police reports or witnesses; internal investigations at the time resulted only in settlements, a common corporate practice to preempt litigation irrespective of merit. Cain attributed the timing and amplification of the allegations—emerging as he led national polls—to a politically motivated media campaign by establishment figures opposed to his outsider candidacy, noting inconsistencies in his own early recollections stemmed from faded memory over 15 years but did not alter his blanket denials.[130] Mainstream outlets like Politico and The New York Times, which covered the story extensively, drew from anonymous sources and accuser statements but provided no independent verification, reflecting a pattern where left-leaning media prioritized unproven claims against conservative figures amid broader institutional biases favoring narrative over empirical adjudication.

Critiques of Business and Policy Ideas

Critics of Cain's tenure as CEO of Godfather's Pizza from 1986 to 1996 highlighted his aggressive cost-cutting strategy, which involved closing about one-third of the chain's 900 stores and laying off hundreds of employees to address $60 million in debt and declining sales, portraying these actions as prioritizing short-term profits over employee welfare.[23] These measures, however, averted imminent bankruptcy and restored profitability within 14 months, enabling subsequent expansion and long-term job preservation across the surviving operations, as the company was sold in a leveraged buyout by 1988.[23] Empirical outcomes affirm the causal efficacy of such restructuring in distressed firms, where failure to act decisively would have resulted in total liquidation and greater job losses.[131] Cain's 9-9-9 tax proposal—a 9% flat tax on personal income, corporate profits, and a national sales tax replacing existing federal levies—drew accusations of regressivity from left-leaning analysts, who argued the sales tax component would impose a heavier relative burden on low-income households that allocate more of their earnings to consumption, potentially raising effective rates for non-filers currently exempt from income taxes.[132][68] In rebuttal, Cain emphasized that roughly 47% of Americans paid no federal income tax in 2011, positioning the plan as a net benefit for low earners by eliminating income and payroll taxes while fostering economic expansion; supply-side effects akin to the Laffer curve, where reduced rates incentivize investment and labor participation, were projected to generate sufficient revenue growth—potentially 15-20% GDP increase—to mitigate distributional concerns and broaden the tax base.[133][134] Economist Arthur Laffer endorsed this dynamic, noting historical precedents where tax simplification and rate cuts expanded revenues without exacerbating inequality.[134] Media depictions during Cain's 2012 presidential bid often dismissed him as unqualified, citing his absence of prior elected office or government experience as disqualifying for national leadership.[48] This narrative overlooked his foundational expertise as a mathematician—holding a B.S. in mathematics and M.S. in computer science—and demonstrated managerial success, including turning around a Pillsbury subsidiary before Godfather's, alongside policy engagement such as testifying before Congress on Social Security reform and Federal Reserve matters in the 1990s and 2000s.[48] Such credentials underscored transferable skills in quantitative analysis and executive decision-making, countering claims of inadequacy with verifiable achievements in private-sector revitalization and public advocacy.[23]

Final Years and Enduring Impact

Post-Campaign Activities and Health Struggles

Following the suspension of his 2012 presidential campaign on December 3, 2011, Cain resumed his career in conservative media and public speaking. He hosted "The Herman Cain Show" on Atlanta's WSB News 95.5 FM and AM 750 WSB, succeeding Neal Boortz in a morning slot starting in early 2013, where he discussed economic policy, leadership principles, and Republican politics until the program's conclusion on August 3, 2018.[40][33] After 2018, he continued providing daily commentary for the station. Cain also maintained an active schedule of speaking engagements, emphasizing business leadership and motivational themes drawn from his corporate experience, including appearances at events like the Texas Women's Empowerment Foundation leadership summit in August 2012.[135] Cain's health history included a diagnosis of stage IV colon cancer in 2006, which had metastasized to his liver, prompting immediate chemotherapy followed by surgery that excised approximately 30 percent of his colon and 70 percent of his liver.[136][137] By 2007, the cancer entered remission, with Cain achieving five years cancer-free status by 2011, an outcome his physicians described as statistically improbable given the advanced stage at diagnosis.[138] In public reflections, Cain attributed his survival to innovations in the U.S. free-market healthcare system, which enabled access to advanced treatments unavailable under more centralized models, explicitly contrasting this with government-run alternatives like the Affordable Care Act.[139] From 2016 onward, Cain vocally supported elements of President Trump's agenda, particularly the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, arguing that opposition to such reforms would be politically and economically misguided.[140] He highlighted empirical post-enactment data, including corporate wage increases and bonuses—such as those announced by companies like Walmart and AT&T in early 2018—as evidence of the policy's stimulative effects on worker compensation and business confidence, aligning with his longstanding advocacy for supply-side tax reductions.[141] These positions reinforced Cain's influence within conservative circles through media appearances and commentary up to 2019.

Death from COVID-19 Complications

Herman Cain tested positive for COVID-19 on June 29, 2020, nine days after attending President Donald Trump's campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 20, where he did not wear a mask.[142] [143] He was hospitalized on July 1 at Northside Hospital in Atlanta due to serious symptoms, including respiratory distress requiring supplemental oxygen.[144] [145] Cain, who was 74 years old and had a history of stage IV colon cancer diagnosed in 2006 (from which he had recovered following surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation), faced elevated risks associated with advanced age and prior serious illness.[146] Initial updates indicated improvement with oxygen support as of July 27, but his condition deteriorated, and he was placed on a ventilator in his final days.[147] [148] He died on July 30, 2020, from COVID-19 complications, as confirmed by medical reports and not attributed to recurrence of his prior cancer.[149] [144] A statement from Cain's staff, speaking on behalf of the family, announced his passing and described his final moments as peaceful, with loved ones present; the family emphasized his faith and rejected narratives politicizing the circumstances of his infection or precautions taken at public events.[145] [150] Cain's daughter, Melanie Cain Gallo, later noted that while the rally's timing coincided with his exposure, the family focused on his personal resilience and the inherent vulnerabilities of his age and health history rather than assigning sole causal blame to the event.[150]

Assessment of Legacy and Influence

Herman Cain's 2012 presidential campaign exemplified the viability of non-traditional candidates in Republican primaries, predating Donald Trump's 2016 bid by demonstrating the appeal of anti-establishment rhetoric from business outsiders.[151] His surge to the top of national polls in October 2011, reaching 28% support in a Reuters/Ipsos survey on October 15, highlighted voter frustration with career politicians and foreshadowed the outsider dynamics that propelled Trump four years later.[53] As one of the few prominent black conservatives to mount a serious national campaign, Cain amplified voices challenging the Democratic lean of most African American voters, arguing that dependency on government programs perpetuated poverty rather than self-reliance.[152] This positioned him as a bridge figure in black conservatism, emphasizing personal achievement over systemic excuses, though his electability faltered amid personal scandals.[153] Cain's advocacy for the 9-9-9 tax plan—a proposed 9% flat tax on income, corporate profits, and sales to replace existing federal levies—sparked widespread debate within GOP circles, injecting simplicity and revenue neutrality into fiscal policy discussions.[69] The plan, detailed in Cain's October 2011 campaign materials, aimed to stimulate growth by broadening the tax base and eliminating deductions, drawing both praise for its transparency from supply-side advocates and criticism for potential regressivity from outlets like the Economic Policy Institute, which estimated it would shift burdens toward lower earners.[132] While never enacted, elements of flat-tax reform echoed in subsequent Republican platforms, such as the 2012 GOP pledge's emphasis on simplifying the code, and Cain's Godfather's Pizza turnaround—saving the chain from bankruptcy in 1986 through cost-cutting and incentives—served as a model for applying private-sector efficiency to public governance.[53] Despite critiques of his limited political experience and the 9-9-9 plan's vulnerabilities to political attack, Cain's influence lay in causal shifts toward prioritizing fiscal restraint over expansive spending in conservative discourse.[69] His withdrawal from the race on December 3, 2011, after sexual harassment allegations, underscored electability barriers for outsiders, yet his post-campaign endorsement of Trump in 2016 and consideration for the Federal Reserve Board in 2019 reinforced his role in normalizing brash, results-oriented conservatism.[83] Empirically, Cain's peak poll performance correlated with heightened media scrutiny of Tea Party fiscal demands, contributing to a GOP pivot away from deficit-financed stimulus toward balanced-budget rhetoric in the 2012 platform.[154] This legacy endures in the party's skepticism of elite expertise, though tempered by recognition that unvetted policy slogans require rigorous vetting to avoid implementation pitfalls.

Personal Dimensions

Family Life and Relationships

Herman Cain married Gloria Etchison in June 1968 following her graduation from Morris Brown College.[155] The couple had two children, son Vincent and daughter Melanie.[155] Gloria Cain primarily focused on homemaking, supporting the family's stability while Cain pursued his business career.[155] The Cains resided in an upscale community south of Atlanta, maintaining a private family life away from public scrutiny.[156] During Cain's 2012 presidential campaign, Gloria remained at their Atlanta-area home, avoiding the political spotlight and limiting family involvement in his professional endeavors.[156][157] The family emphasized faith, regularly attending services at an Atlanta megachurch where the Cains publicly celebrated their wedding anniversaries alongside other couples.[158] This religious foundation underscored their household, with Cain crediting shared Christian values for the enduring partnership that spanned over five decades until his death.[158]

Philanthropy and Personal Values

Herman Cain's personal values were deeply rooted in his Baptist Christian faith, which he credited with shaping his approach to integrity and self-reliance throughout his career. In interviews, Cain described faith as a foundational element of his life, stating that it provided guidance during challenges, including his successful turnaround of Godfather's Pizza in the 1980s, where he attributed outcomes to divine providence rather than solely personal acumen.[159][160] He served as an associate minister at Antioch Baptist Church in Atlanta and emphasized biblical principles of personal responsibility, often rejecting narratives of systemic victimhood in favor of individual agency and hard work.[159] Cain's commitment to these values manifested in mentorship efforts aimed at young people, particularly inner-city youth and emerging Black conservatives, whom he encouraged to pursue entrepreneurship and leadership without reliance on government aid. Associates noted his quiet dedication to guiding young Black men toward conservative principles, viewing it as a counter to dependency mindsets.[9] He supported initiatives like youth choirs during his time in Omaha, Nebraska, and spoke at events such as Junior Achievement programs to promote business acumen and resilience.[161] In 2011, Cain and his wife Gloria contributed nearly $150,000 to establish a fund focused on inner-city youth development, including an annual lecture series to foster entrepreneurial skills.[162] These philanthropic activities aligned with Cain's ethos of empowering individuals through practical skills and moral grounding, reflecting his belief that success stems from internal drive rather than external excuses. He advocated for mentorship as a means to instill values of integrity and initiative, drawing from his own rise from modest beginnings in segregated Georgia to corporate leadership.[9][160]

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