0 6A - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A -Wednsda, Noembr 2,2011TheMichganDail - ichiga nilomli Jobs,corporatetax policy take center stage at Idaho debate Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain speaks at the National Press Club in Washington on Monday. The Georgia businessman has repeatedly denied allegations of sexual harassment. Woman accusing Cain wants opportunity to talk Two women have reportedly accused Cain of harassment The lawyer for one of two women who reportedly accused Republican presidential can- didate Herman Cain of sexual harassment in the 1990s said yes- terday he had asked their former employer to waive an agreement and allow her to talk openly about her allegations. Joel P. Bennett, a Washing- ton lawyer who specializes in employment cases, said in media interviews that his client wants the National Restaurant Asso- ciation to waive confidentiality so she can respond to Cain's claims that the complaints were "totally baseless and totally false." A spokeswoman for the'res- taurant association, Sue Hensley, said last night that the group had not been contacted by Bennett. Cain, a Georgia businessman best known as the former CEO of Godfather's Pizza, was head of the association at the time of the complaints Bennett told The Associated Press he would have more to say after he meets with his client Wednesday. In an interview last night on CNN, he said he stood behind his client. "I know her very well," he said, "and I'm sure she would not make a false com- plaint." The New York Times reported last night that the National Res- taurant Association gave a female employee a year's salary in sever- ance pay, $35,000, after she said an encounter with Cain made her uncomfortable working there. The newspaper cited three peo- ple with knowledge of the pay- ment to the woman, who was not Bennett's client. One of Cain's rivals, Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minneso- ta, appeared to take a jab at Cain when she met last night with supporters at a Baptist church in Marshalltown, Iowa. Though not mentioning Cain by name as she stood in the pul- pit, Bachmann said: "This is the year when we can't have any sur- prises with our candidate. We have to have a candidate that we can know, when we put them into office, we can trust them with their record of what they have done and who they are." Cain, meanwhile, spent yester- day much as he did Monday, going from interview to interview to defend himself. There was time for politicking, too: He met last night with Republican senators at a restaurant near the Capitol as part of a meet-and-greet strategy with lawmakers whose support he is seeking. Cain's contradictory expla- nations - he also denies he has changed his story - have raised questions about details of the allegations and about his current ability to manage a crisis in the national spotlight. The accusa- tions surfaced just as had risen in national polls in the GOP nomi- nation fight two months before the leadoff Iowa caucuses. He said last night on Fox News that he believes there are some Democrats who want him defeat- ed because he's an unconven- tional candidate "achieving some unexpected, unconventional results," and there could be some on the right "who do not want to see me because I am not the establishment candidate." Cain, who is black, said he believes race is also involved "but we don't have any evidence to support it." He added: "Rela- tive to the left, I believe that race is a bigger driving factor. I don't think it's a driving factor on the right." Romney, Cain absent from Republican debate One by one, five Republican candidates for president took the stage yesterday in the state that holds the first presidential contest to pitch themselves as the strongest to challenge Dem- ocratic President Barack Obama on voters' top issue: jobs. Absent from the forum was the one Republican who has made that argument central to his second campaign for the White House: Mitt Romney. The former Massachusetts gov- ernor, sitting atop most polls and a pile of cash, was in New York raising money. And businessman Herman Cain took a pass, too, staying in Washington to deal with the fallout of the disclosure of sexual harassment allegations from the 1990s while he was the head of the National Restaurant Association. So Rick Perry, Rick Santo- rum, Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul and Newt Gingrich looked to fill that vacuum, jockeying for relevance on corporate tax pol- icy in hopes of gaining an edge with economic conservatives two months before the Iowa caucuses. In a GOP primary campaign with few major poli- ty distinctions, the 90-minute forum illuminated incremental differences as the candidates worked to demonstrate savvy on voters' top concern. Of those on stage, only Perry said he favored maintaining a tax on reintroducing corporate profits held offshore to the U.S. "I would put a five-and-a- quarter percent rate on that money for one year, to allow it to be brought back in, to be able to create jobs," the Texas gover- nor told the audience of about 400 at Vermeer Manufacturing, an agricultural plant, in Pella. Today the money is taxed at the 35-percent corporate rate. Santorum, the former Penn- sylvania senator, favors requir- ing no tax on the money if it is spent on a manufacturing plant and equipment. And Bachmann, Gingrich and Paul saidthey sup- port a zero-percent tax, without strings. "Without a doubt, it's their money," said Bachmann, a Min- nesota congresswoman. "Prof- its are stimulus. That's the true stimulus." All the candidates on stage called for vastly cutting federal regulations and overturning the health care law. They also support incentives - to varying degrees - for U.S. companies to bring money generated overseas back into the country on the argument the infusion of cash will spark expansion and hiring. Estimates range from $1.2 to 1.7 trillion in off-shore profits. Studies have shown, howev- er, that a similar holiday under President George W. Bush and a GOP-controlled Congress in 2004 and 2005 had little effect on job growth. The forum was one of sev- eral this year in Iowa and New Hampshire, where the vot- ing begins in January. The appearances are important for lesser-known candidates to meet voters in key early-voting states. Most of the multicandi- date events in Iowa so far have been sponsored by social con- servative groups, a potent force in Iowa's GOP caucus elector- ate. This one was put on by the National Association of Manu- facturers in hopes of giving Iowans a better sense of where candidates stand economically. But the meeting's value was unclear, considering Romney, who is stressing his decades as an investment capital firm exec- utive as proof of his economic savvy, and Cain, who is running on his record as a businessman, weren't there. Both are running ahead of the others in national and state polls. "The ones that weren't here were the ones that missed out," said Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, a pro-business Republican elect- ed again last year after a dozen years away from the office and who co-hosted the event. Romney chose to stick with his policy not to appear with his rivals on stage, except at nation- ally televised debates, even though he's competing more aggressively in Iowa than he had earlier this year and is try- ing to win over the pro-business segment of the GOP that lifted Branstad to victory last year. "In my book it hurts him," said undecided Iowa Republi- can Connie Richards, a nurs- ing home administrator who attended the Pella forum. "If they have an economic plan to present, I want to hear it, and I didn't today." Of all of Romney's rivals, Perry is working the hardest to emerge as Romney's chief chal- lenge on the economy - and he has the money to do it. But even though he had the opportunity, Perry took a pass on jabbing at Romney and focused on promoting his own plans. "In Texas, or in Iowa, or whatever state it is, we know that the way you create jobs is not by overtaxing, overregu- lating or overlitigating," Perry said. Paul, a libertarian Texas representative, ignited laugh- ter when asked what he would like to hear Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke say at a scheduled Wednesday meet- ing on interest rates. "He was resigning," said Paul, who has called for the elimination of the Federal Reserve Bank. Bachmann stressed open- ing international markets and declaring a moratorium on fed- eral regulations. "We need the federal governmtent to get off our back." Santorum pitched his plan to eliminate the corporate income tax for companies that make products in the United States, saying: "We need to make more things in America again." Although all the candidates sharply criticized Obama's approach to the economy, Gin- grich was most aggressive, calling the president, "a left- wing radical," and arguing that unemployment compensation should require job-training. RELEASE DATE- Thursday, November 3, 2011 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 7 Three Lines": 37 Preparestoredo, 49 Englishjellytu 1 Like gates, at oldaTV arama as aquiltsectin 5O tstablishes, aith times 8 Champagne 38 Courtstandard "down" 5 Wide-brimmed designation 40 Ready-to-plant 51 Ballpoint pen hat wearers 9 Diiehbreakfast plot brand 1 g-A.ross, e.g tare b 41 Augmented 52 cell research 14 Pasture gait 10 Convent 43 "Crack a Bottle" 53"Timequake" 15 Archaeologist's address rapper author Vonnegut prefix 11 Mideastchieftain 44 Scott in an 1857 54 Hipster's 16 Chatroom "Just a 12 Mid-20th-century case "Gotchal" thought... 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