Fourth GOP senator opposes Trump Fed pick Herman Cain, effectively ending path to confirmation

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WASHINGTON — Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer, N.D., on Thursday became the fourth member of his party’s caucus to tell reporters he would vote against a nomination for former pizza executive Herman Cain to join the board of the Federal Reserve.

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“If I had to [vote] today, I would vote no” on Cain, Cramer told reporters Thursday on Capitol Hill.

Cain has yet to be formally nominated by President Donald Trump, but last week Trump announced that Cain was his pick to fill one of two open seats on the central bank’s board. Trump intends to nominate conservative economist and author Stephen Moore for the other vacant spot.

Cramer’s announcement all but doomed Cain’s chances of being confirmed by the Senate if Trump were to formally nominate him. Earlier this week, GOP Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Cory Gardner of Colorado, and newly minted Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah all told reporters they could not support a nomination of Cain.

With only 53 Republicans in the Senate, opposition from four of them would mean that Cain could only count on 49 votes to confirm him, presuming, of course, that no Democrats crossed the aisle to support him. Without a 51-vote majority, Cain could not be confirmed.

Opposition from Cramer could also leave a Cain nomination deadlocked in the Senate Banking Committee, before it even reached the floor of the Senate for a vote.

The news of Cramer’s opposition came as White House support for Cain also seemed to weaken on Thursday.

“Yes, we are, at the moment,” National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow replied when asked during an event in Washington about whether the White House still stood behind Cain, a former pizza executive and 2012 Republican presidential candidate. Kudlow is a former CNBC contributor.

“He’s in the vetting process, we will see how that turns out,” Kudlow added. “I don’t want to prejudge it one way or the other.”

A former 2012 GOP presidential candidate, Cain suspended his primary campaign in December 2011 after it emerged that three women had accused him of workplace sexual harassment, a fourth woman accused him of sexual assault, and a fifth woman came forward to allege that she and Cain had carried out a 13-year-long extramarital affair.

Cain has denied all the allegations. Still, the prospect of revisiting the allegations during a heated Senate confirmation hearing, and having to publicly defend Cain, likely holds little appeal for the White House or for Republican senators in swing states.

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