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Herman Cain

Herman Cain is the retired businessman and lobbyist from Georgia who in 2011 ran for the Republican nomination for president. Herman Cain came to politics late in life, rising to prominence after a public debate in 1994 with President Bill Clinton over the presidents plan to reform health care. At the time, Cain was the chairman on the board of directors of the National Restaurant Association, a lobbying group, and the president and Chief Executive Officer of the Godfathers Pizza chain. Herman Cain grew up in Atlanta, Georgia and has a degree in mathematics from Morehouse College (1967) and a graduate degree in computer science from Indianas Purdue University (1971). After working as a civilian analyst for the U.S. Navy, Cain worked in the early 1970s for the Coca-Cola Company and then joined Pillsbury in 1977, where he worked his way up to the position of vice president. He had great success running hundreds of Burger King restaurants (at the time a subsidiary of Pillsbury), and Pillsbury made him president of their Godfathers Pizza chain in 1986. He and a team of investors managed a buyout in 1988, and he joined the National Restaurant Associations board that same year. Cain resigned his post at Godfathers in 1996 to act as the Associations full-time president and to work as an economic adviser to the unsuccessful Republican candidates for president and vice president, Bob Dole and Jack Kemp. After leaving the National Restaurant Association in 1999, Herman Cain joined the world of politics as a columnist, author and on-the-air commentator. He ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate in 2004, and in 2008 landed his own radio show out of Atlanta. By 2010 Cain was a popular speaker at political rallies for what was called the tea party movement, a group of disaffected conservatives drawn to Cain for his views on taxes (he doesnt like them), abortions (he doesnt like them), and President Barack Obamas policies (he doesnt like them). Cain announced in May of 2011 that he would run for president. He

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