FILE - In this Oct. 3, 2011 file photo Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain stops to address the media as he arrives for a meeting with developer Donald Trump, in New York. During rollicking campaign performance Cain thundered, "The sleeping giant called 'we the people' has awakened" evoking an old-fashioned church revival, complete with audience cries of "Amen". Whether it's selling his book or his presidential aspirations, this is Cain at his best — grinning, joking and wooing a crowd, soaking in the adulation as he vows to lead the cheering masses to a promised land of "less regulation, less legislation and less taxation." |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Georgia businesswoman said Monday she and Herman Cain had a 13-year extramarital affair, an allegation the Republican presidential hopeful denied as strongly as earlier allegations of sexual harassment.
"Here we go again. I didn't do anything wrong," Cain said on CNN. He acknowledged he knew the woman who was behind the accusation.
Moments after Cain issued a preemptive denial, an Atlanta television station posted a story to its website quoting a woman identified as Ginger White as saying, "It wasn't complicated. I was aware that he was married. And I was also aware I was involved in a very inappropriate situation, relationship."
Cain's candidacy was soaring in the polls until he was hit less than a month ago with accusations that he sexually harassed several women and groped one while he was a high-ranking official at the National Restaurant Association. He has since fallen back in the surveys, and been eclipsed by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in the race to emerge as the principle conservative alternative to Mitt Romney.
In this case, unlike the others, Cain took the unorthodox step of issuing a denial in advance.
"I did not have an affair, and until I see and hear exactly what's going to be, what accusations are going to be made, let's move on," he said.
Asked if he suspected his accuser had emails, letters, gifts or other possible evidence of an affair, he replied,"No."
The Fox 5 television station in Atlanta also posted a statement it said it received from Cain's lawyer, Lin Wood. The statement said the former businessman has no obligation to "discuss these types of accusations publicly with the media and he will not do so even if his principled position is viewed unfavorably by members of the media."
The posting quoted the statement as drawing a distinction between "private alleged consensual conduct between adults" and a case of harassment. It did not include an explicit denial of an affair along the lines that Cain himself provided in his television interview.
Contacted by AP, Wood declined immediate comment.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.