Orlando Sentinel

2012 presidenti­al hopeful dies

- By Lisa J. Adams Wagner

Herman Cain, former pizza chain CEO and supporter of Trump, died of complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s.

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, former Republican presidenti­al candidate and former CEO of a major pizza chain who went on to become an ardent supporter of President Donald Trump, has died of complicati­ons from the coronaviru­s. He was 74.

A post on Cain’s Twitter account Thursday announced the death. Cain had been ill with the virus for several weeks. It’s not clear when or where he was infected, but he was hospitaliz­ed less than two weeks after attending Trump’s campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June. Cain had been co-chair of Black Voices for Trump.

“We knew when he was first hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 that this was going to be a rough fight,” read an article posted on the Twitter account.

Vice President Mike Pence called Cain “an indispensa­ble voice for the Conservati­ve movement” who will be “deeply missed.”

Cain, who had hoped to become the first Black politician to win the GOP nomination, was initially considered a long-shot candidate. His bid was propelled in September 2011 when he won a straw poll vote in Florida, instantly becoming an alternativ­e candidate for Republican voters concerned that former Massachuse­tts Gov. Mitt Romney was not conservati­ve enough.

But Cain struggled to respond to accusation­s that he had sexually harassed several women and — in a viral video — rambled uncomforta­bly when asked whether he supported or opposed President Barack Obama’s policies in Libya.

There were also gaffes on abortion and torture that led Cain’s critics to question whether he was ready for the White House.

Cain had honed his speaking skills in the corporate world, then hosted a radio talk show in Atlanta that introduced his political views and up-by-the-bootstraps life story to tea party supporters and other conservati­ves.

He first ventured into national politics in 1994 when he publicly challenged President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, on his proposal to force employers to buy health insurance for their employees. “For many, many businesses like mine, the cost of your plan is simply a cost that will cause us to eliminate jobs,” Cain told Clinton. “What will I tell those people whose jobs I will have to eliminate?”

Afterward, the restaurant industry used Cain as a spokesman as it campaigned against Clinton’s plan, which ultimately failed.

Cain served as a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City from 1992 to 1996. After moving back to his native Georgia, he ran for U.S. Senate as a Republican in 2004. He lost to Rep. Johnny Isakson in the primary.

Less than two years later, Cain was diagnosed with late-stage cancer in his colon that had spread to his liver. He recovered and later credited God with persuading him to run for president after Obama took office in 2009.

Cain projected a selfconfid­ent image that at times bordered on arrogance. He referred to himself in the third person, and his motivation­s speaking company was named T.H.E. New Voice Inc. The acronym stood for The Hermanator

Experience.

Cain’s presidenti­al run was unlikely given his origins. Born in the segregated South, his father worked three jobs as a janitor, barber and chauffeur, while his mother was a servant. He graduated from Morehouse College and received a master’s degree from Purdue University and worked as a civilian mathematic­ian in the Navy.

While it was a good job, Cain said his ambitions were in the corporate world. He wanted to be president of “something somewhere,” he later wrote.

He worked first for CocaCola, became a vice president with Pillsbury, then was appointed to run its struggling Burger King unit in the Philadelph­ia area. His success prompted Pillsbury officials to ask Cain to take over its flounderin­g Godfather’s Pizza chain. Cain said he returned the franchise to profitabil­ity.

The centerpiec­e of Cain’s presidenti­al campaign was his 9-9-9 plan, which would have replaced the tax code with a 9% tax on personal and corporate income and a 9% national sales tax.

“If 10% is good enough for God, 9% ought to be good enough for the federal government,” he told crowds.

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