No way, Herman Cain is definitely not qualified, he doesn't meet the criminality levels required for typical trump nominees.
https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-schedule-twitter-pence-intelligence-1311547 DONALD TRUMP HAS HAD NOTHING ON HIS SCHEDULE THIS WEEK EXCEPT LUNCH AND AN INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING As of Wednesday morning, President Donald Trump has had nothing on his schedule this week except his daily intelligence briefing and a lunch with Vice President Mike Pence. The open calendar comes after Trump on Friday agreed to temporarily reopen government without getting his demand for border wall funds, which he has insisted is not a concession but time for more negotiations with Democrats.
https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-intel-chiefs-divide-national-security-risks-2019-2 'He's doing the enemy's job for them': Current and former officials compare Trump to a toddler and say his attacks on the intel community create a goldmine for foreign governments President Donald Trump's most recent public campaign against the US intelligence community has stunned current and former intelligence officials. "He's doing the enemy's job for them," one FBI agent told INSIDER. Another agent compared Trump's unwillingness to accept intelligence assessments that contradict his beliefs to the behavior of a toddler. "It's like when my son threw temper tantrums when I told him he couldn't do something or if I said something he didn't like. Of course, my son was three years old at the time and wasn't sitting in the Oval Office with the nuclear button," the second agent told INSIDER. As a result of Trump's actions, intelligence officers are "more vulnerable to approaches by foreign intelligence services — and more vulnerable to accepting those approaches — than any other time in US history," Glenn Carle, a former CIA covert operative, told INSIDER. "For decades, the Soviet Union and, more recently, Russia, have denigrated the CIA and our intelligence professionals, attempting to delegitimize US intelligence in the process," another intelligence veteran, Ned Price, said. "Now our adversaries have a helper who sits in the Oval Office." Trump's apparently short attention span during intelligence briefings is well established. Several media reports over the last two years said officials try to keep the president focused by using visual aids and photographs and by condensing the material. They also reportedly use his name and title as often as possible to get him to pay more attention. But according to TIME, officials are most alarmed by Trump's angry reactions when they brief him on information that contradicts his beliefs. Two intelligence officers told TIME that they had been warned not to give the president intelligence assessments that contradict his public stances. "Here's the dilemma: how do you serve an executive who might be a foreign asset and who undermines the functioning of the national security establishment?" Carle said. "If you serve him, you might be betraying your oath to preserve and protect the Constitution. If you don't, then you're betraying your oath to serve the executive and your commander." He added: "CIA officers spend our careers preying upon exactly this dilemma."