“I’m thinking he would have to have a split personality to do the things that were said,” Gloria Cain tells Van Susteren, according to an excerpt from the transcript. She also says: “You hear the graphic allegations, and we know that would have been something that’s totally disrespectful of her as a woman. And I know the type of person he is. He totally respects women.”
The interview turns the preternaturally silent political spouse from meta-story — about how tough it is to come by information on Gloria Cain — to story.
And, presumably, it will settle any questions about her height.
As Herman Cain has defended himself against charges that he made unwanted comments and advances toward several women, he has said that it was comparisons to his wife’s height that led one woman to make allegations against him in a claim that was settled.
He has also said that his wife of 43 years — the two met as college students in Atlanta, where he attended Morehouse and she went to Morris Brown — remains “200 percent supportive of me,” and is “still 200 percent my wife.”
After Chicagoan Sharon Bialek’s news conference last week detailing harassment allegations, including that Cain groped her, he recalled what his wife told him over the phone: “The things that woman described, she said that doesn’t even sound like you, and I’ve known you for 45 years.” Cain said, “My own wife said that I wouldn’t do anything as silly as what that lady was talking about.”
For all her husband’s repeated invocations of her, Gloria Cain has remained the campaign’s mystery woman. Their hometown newspaper, the Atlanta Journal Constitution, says that aside from appearing with her husband as he announced his presidential run in May, she’s been “largely absent since.” The photo most of the media uses of her is from that announcement, and there appear to be no quotes from her in circulation. Local voting records show she voted in the Democratic presidential primary in 2008.
The few details about her come from the candidate’s new biography, “This Is Herman Cain! My Journey to the White House.” Chapter 3, entitled “Gloria,” begins with a passage from Proverbs about “a virtuous woman.” He talks about being first drawn to her good looks: “Gloria Etchison was beautiful. Let’s face it; I was first attracted by her looks. And then I figured out she was also smart.”
He writes that she’s a good cook who prefers to stay home in Atlanta, where they attend Antioch Baptist Church, and how they spend time with their two grown children, Melanie and Vincent, and their three grandchildren.
Loading...
Comments