Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Herman Cain, RIP
Herman Cain, RIP
Mar 28, 2026 2:13 PM

Herman Cain, the 2012 Republican presidential hopeful and former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, passed away early Thursday morning at the age of 74. During his meteoric rise from poverty to the heights of the business world, Cain shared his faith in Christ, free markets, and the American dream. A former cancer survivor, he was hospitalized on July 1 plications from COVID-19. He leaves behind his wife, the former Gloria Etchison, and two children: Melanie and Vincent.

Cain was born on December 13, 1945, in Memphis, Tennessee, the son of two hard-working parents. “My great grandparents were sharecroppers. My grandparents were farmers,” he said. His father worked three jobs at once, while his mother also worked — all in menial professions (janitor, barber, and chauffer; and maid, respectively). His family moved to Atlanta when he was a child, where his father, Luther, chauffeured the president of the Coca-Cola Company. “Most generations want to give the next generation a better start,” Cain said. “That’s what my parents tried to do for me.”

The younger Cain rose from the segregated South through his superior intellect and hours poring over books. Cain graduated with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Morehouse College in 1967 and a master’s degree puter science from Purdue University in 1971. He worked as a civilian employee for the Navy — “he was literally a rocket scientist,” a former employee wrote — before working his way up through the fast food industry. He worked for Pillsbury, which owned Burger King at the time. He became regional vice president over 400 Burger King restaurants, but only pleting a thorough training that began with making burgers and cleaning the restrooms. That taught him the importance of tailoring every aspect of the business to the customer experience.

He became best known for turning around Godfather’s Pizza, which was hemorrhaging money when he became CEO in 1986. He listened to customer feedback and returned the chain to its core mission of service. With those changes came profits. Cain had the franchise in the black within 14 months. He humbly credited his rapid success to “marketing,” but he was the one crafting the strategy and meeting his consumers’ needs. Along the way, Cain also served in the Kansas City Federal Reserve from 1992 to 1996, rising to chairman.

Herman Cain first came to national prominence when he politely confronted then-President Bill Clinton at a 1994 town hall meeting dedicated to Clinton’s proposed health care plan. Although they disagreed, Cain spoke in a respectful and engaging way. His speech intended to educate and persuade President Clinton (who, nevertheless, persisted).

Cain’s measured, masterful, self-assured performance made him a Republican Party star. He caught the attention of many party leaders, including Jack Kemp, who — ever interested in expanding opportunity to minority neighborhoods — befriended Cain and spent hours at a time discussing the finer points of free-market economics. Cain would get an insider’s view of Washington as an economic adviser to the ill-fated Bob Dole/Jack Kemp presidential campaign of 1996. The same year, Cain left the pizza business to lead the National Restaurant Association until 1999.

Cain made a brief foray into presidential politics in 2000, before endorsing Steve Forbes. He ran in the Republican primary for the U.S. Senate seat in Georgia, losing to Johnny Isakson.

He entered the toughest battle of his life in 2006, when doctors diagnosed him with stage 4 colon cancer, saying it had metastasized to his liver. He treated his ailing body as he did his ailing franchise: aggressively. Although he had less than a one-in-three chance of survival, he went into remission.

He emerged in time to be present at the creation of the Tea Party movement. He spoke at its rallies and broadcast its message on Atlanta radio. For a moment, he became its favored standard bearer. Cain declared his candidacy for president of the United States. In October 2011, he shocked politicos by finishing first in a national poll, ing the first African American to do so in the GOP.

Cain climbed to the top of the pack with another piece of ingenious marketing: His “9-9-9 Plan” called for a flat tax of 9% across the board on e, business, and a new national sales tax. Cain, an associate pastor at Antioch Baptist Church in Atlanta, invoked the biblical concept of the tithe to promote his plan. “If 10% is good enough for God,” he said, “then 9% should be just fine for the federal government.” Proponents said a national sales tax would stimulate economic growth; opponents said politicians in Washington would see it as another revenue stream for their already excessive spending. Whatever the plan’s merits or demerits, Arthur Laffer wrote in the Wall Street Journal that Cain deserved credit for reminding Americans that “the sole purpose of the tax code was to raise the necessary funds to run government,” not e redistribution, encouraging favored industries, and discouraging unfavorable behavior.”

Cain also rooted his message in returning the nation to the voluntary face-to-face service he found rooted in the Bible. Jesus, he once wrote, was “the perfect conservative”:

He helped the poor without one government program. He healed the sick without a government health care system. He feed the hungry without food stamps. And everywhere He went, it turned into a rally, attracting large crowds, and giving them hope, encouragement and inspiration.

Yet Cain’s presidential aspirations plummeted as quickly as they rose. The candidate made verbal missteps on abortion (which he had always opposed without exception) and had a foggy moment when discussing Barack Obama’s unauthorized military action in Libya. He acknowledged he had once supported the bailouts at the heart of the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). Ultimately, he suspended his campaign in December 2011 after allegations of sexual harassment, which he had settled out of court and dismissed as “baseless.”

Cain returned to talk radio and sometimes had his name floated for government positions. President Donald Trump selected Cain for a term as one of the seven governors of the Federal Reserve in April 2019, but the nomination disappeared as it became clear Cain lacked requisite support.

Through it all, Cain’s business acumen never wavered. The editor of his website remembered Cain’s generosity in donating his time to shore up his freelancing business. “Ever the dealmaker, he would fill me in with details of his negotiations with people on any number of things,” wrote Dan Calabrese. “I would always tell him I should have him negotiate my deals with my business’s other clients, because he did them better than anyone.”

More than anything, Cain saw himself as municator. He had just filmed the first episode of a new Netflix series when he took ill.

His 2012 campaign spokeswoman, Ellen Caramichael, tweeted that Cain’s “American Dream story is one for the history books.” He “[o]vercame absolute destitution, genuine discrimination, stage IV cancer and so much hardship in between. Rose up the ranks of America’s biggest corporations, advised presidential campaigns, chaired a Federal Reserve bank.”

Cain saw himself as living proof that the American Dream of rising through hard work still existed. He dedicated his life to sharing the market orientation, mechanisms, and moral code necessary to succeed. “In the end, what Cain wanted was for other people to be as successful as he had had been in the world of business,” writes Sean Higgins at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.

But he wanted more than that, too. Calabrese wrote:

Romans 2:6-7 says: “God ‘will repay each person according to what they have done.’ To those who by persistence in doing good seek glory, honor and immortality, he will give eternal life.” By that measure, we expect the boss is in for some kind of e, because all of us who knew him are well aware of how much good he did.

May his words prove true. Requiescat in pace.

Herman Cain, RIP.

Skidmore. CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Superman and Christ, Redux
Would the fact that Superman is the “longest running fictional character ever” support or undermine my claim that he typically functions as an anti-Christ figure? I should observe that God himself was considered and rejected for the appellation: “It should be noted, however, that those who would proffer the cheeky suggestion that Our Father Who Art in Heaven is a fictional character are godless heathens and/or Theology majors. Anyway: Troublemakers. Let us pay them no heed.” ...
Acton Commentary: Motivation and Regulation in Financial Markets
“When designing rules for a game, one must take into account the moral character of the players,” Oskari Juurikkala reminds us in today’s Acton Commentary. “But there needs to be adequate variation: general laws designed for crooks will not produce any saints.” Read mentary at the Acton Website. ...
Greed Looms Large in Westminster, House Speaker Steps Down
Worse were the days under monarchical rule when greedy and corrupt political officials were quickly guillotined for accepting bribes and illegal financial contributions. Read More… Yet another moral meltdown based on greed. This time the human vice reared its ugly head in Westminster. For the first time since 1650, a Speaker of the House of Commons has resigned under angry public protest of his controversial use of public funds. Yesterday, the Labour party’s second most senior leader, Michael Martin of...
GM Bankruptcy A ‘Hammer Blow’ To Michigan
The Detroit News says the General Motors bankruptcy filing “is a hammer blow for a state that was already on its knees.” In an editorial, the paper calls for an “emergency response” from government and an entirely new orientation to attracting businesses and jobs to the state: Longer term, Michigan’s entire focus must be on creating a business climate that makes the state attractive for job creators in a wide range of industries. It can’t afford to focus on any...
Acton Commentary: The Tyranny of the Obvious
Those who promoted the War on Poverty and other grand plans to end poverty, writes Hunter Baker, “had no inkling that these good-hearted strategies would lead to enduring cycles of poverty and family disintegration that threatened to consume entire generations. Wishing for good es resulted in disaster.” Read mentary at the Acton website. ...
Acton Commentary: The Virtuous Path to African Development
Economists and policy experts are ing up with new solutions for the seemingly intractable problem of African poverty. But Anthony Bradley points out that any reform program “must require certain moral values to truly flourish; in virtue’s absence the same system can serve to create new moral dilemmas.” Read mentary at the Acton website and share your response in ment thread below. ...
Catholic Bishops and the Economy
The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) web site has a new page devoted to Catholic teaching on the economy. It is essentially a reorganization of existing resources, and it does helpfully provide access to the various bishops’ statements over the course of the last couple decades, as well as Vatican sources such as the Catechism and encyclicals. Here is not the place to revisit the whole question of the USCCB and its economic proposals and statements. Suffice it...
Dolan on Catholic bishops
First Things revisits Archbishop Timothy Dolan’s reflections on the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and its role in American religious and political life, past, present, and future. It was originally published in 2005, but deserves renewed scrutiny because Dolan was recently installed as the leader the Archdiocese of New York, widely perceived as the preeminent American see. And his observations happen to be relevant to the Notre Dame controversy (see Michael Miller’s post below); and to the ongoing question...
Hate the Sin, Tax the Sinner?
Update (5/21): The New York Daily News reports that “state lawmakers are trying to give the fat tax new life.” Senate Democrats want to impose a penny excise tax on non-diet sodas to help fund a plan to provide property tax relief to homeowners. “It’s a small amount of money, as far as increasing the price of soda, and it would allow the governor and the state to have a new slogan for soda: ‘Have a coke, a rebate check...
Neuhaus and Rockford Institute: One More Round
A few weeks back, I posted a version of the famed Richard John Neuhaus/Rockford Institute break-up incident. The story there was that the break-up happened because Neuhaus overspent the Institute’s budget on conferences after having been ordered to cancel them. That version of the story came from John Howard, who used to run the Rockford Institute a number of years ago. Howard’s version was new to me. I’d mainly heard the rumblings about ideological discontent and jumped at the chance...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved