Herman Cain is keeping supporters in suspense as he readies an
announcement on whether to abandon his campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination following a string of sexual harassment
allegations and a claim of an extramarital affair.
The Georgia
businessman planned to make the announcement Saturday at what was
supposed to be a festive grand opening of a new headquarters in Atlanta,
rented when Cain sat surprisingly atop the GOP pack.
With the
candidate's poll numbers plummeting and fundraising stalled, some
campaign aides said privately they expected him to exit the race. But
Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon cautioned late Friday that no decision had
been made.
A meeting with key staff members was expected early Saturday.
Cain
returned to his suburban Atlanta home Friday and met with his wife,
Gloria, the first time they have seen each other face to face since
46-year-old Ginger White came forward on Monday and said she and the
Republican had carried on a 13-year relationship.
Cain has denied
having an affair with White. He said the concern over the toll the
allegations were having on his family as well as a candid assessment of
whether his campaign could still attract the needed support would inform
his decision on whether to press ahead.
On Friday night, even as
Cain weighed whether his campaign would move on, volunteers were busy
tacking up signs at his headquarters and a contingent of Secret Service
agents was inspecting the site in advance of Cain's arrival there.
"We
are moving ahead," said Cain's Georgia director David McCleary, who
said he had talked to the candidate earlier in the day and describe him
as "upbeat."
Cain, the former Godfather's Pizza chief executive
who has never held elected office, rose to become an unexpected
front-runner in the volatile Republican race just weeks ago. A
self-styled outsider, Cain enjoyed strong tea party support from
conservatives who viewed him as an alternative to Mitt Romney. His
charisma on the campaign trail drew large and enthusiastic crowds.
But
under the glare of the national spotlight he fumbled policy questions,
leaving questions about whether he was ready for the presidency. Then it
was revealed at the end of October that the National Restaurant
Association had paid settlements to two women who claimed Cain sexually
harassed them while he was president of the organization.
A third
woman told The Associated Press that Cain made inappropriate sexual
advances but that she didn't file a complaint. A fourth woman also
stepped forward to accuse Cain of groping her in a car in 1997.
Cain has denied wrongdoing in all cases.
Polls
suggest his popularity has suffered. A Des Moines Register poll
released Friday showed Cain's support plunging, with backing from 8
percent of Republican caucusgoers in Iowa, down from 23 percent a month
ago.
Fundraising has also fallen off. He issued an email appeal to
supporters on Friday asking for donations, in an attempt to gauge
whether his financial support has dried up.
"I need to know that
you are behind me 100 percent," Cain told backers. "In today's political
environment, the only way we can gauge true support is by the
willingness of our supporters to invest in this effort."
On Friday, Cain urged backers in South Carolina to look past the allegations.
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