Defiant Cain says he won't drop out of GOP race

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Under rising pressure from fellow Republicans, presidential hopeful Herman Cain sought to muddy the reputation of one accuser, forcefully denied any and all allegations of sexual [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/110822105651A8U.html]fujian province global international trade co., ltd[/url]impropriety and vowed Tuesday the growing controversy would not drive him from the race for the White House.
"Ain't gonna happen," he declared.
Cain flashed defiance one day after a woman publicly accused the candidate of groping her more than a decade ago, adding her voice to three other accusers with allegations that presidential rival Mitt Romney called "particularly disturbing."
Speaking at a news conference, Cain vowed, "we'll get through this," as he sought to steady a campaign that has made him the leader in an unofficial race to emerge as Romney's principal conservative rival.
At one point he said he would be willing to take a lie detector test, but then appeared to hedge his answer seconds later.
The Georgia businessman was in the midst [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/100312152303ia7.html]Quanzhou Chuangda Import & Export Co., Ltd[/url] of his second week trying to curtail the furor surrounding his unorthodox campaign. There were signs his political trouble was far from over less than two months before the leadoff contests of the GOP nomination fight.
Romney joined other GOP opponents in urging Cain to answer the allegations. Prominent Republicans pressed for a full accounting. And there were growing indications of unease in conservative circles.
"If there is a pattern then it's a [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/26442197.html]fujian quanzhou kenboo intl trading co., ltd[/url] part of his character and then, yes, it is going to matter," Tony Perkins, head of the conservative Family Research Center, said in an interview.