
She appeared alongside the two other Trump accusers at a NY news conference: Samantha Holvey, who alleged that Trump walked uninvited into a backstage dressing area where she and others were in various states of undress at a 2012 beauty pageant Trump owned, and Jessica Leeds, who accused Trump of groping her when she sat next to him on a commercial airline flight in the late 1970s. "The women are calling for an investigation by Congress of sexual misconduct by the president". Trump denied all claims and the White House said that all the women making allegations against Trump are not being truthful.
Leeds says she was groped and forcibly kissed by Trump on a commercial flight decades ago, while Holvey alleges Trump behaved inappropriately when she was a contestant in his Miss USA pageant in 2006.
"Those people that hate Trump will hate him more, those people that love Trump will think that this is business as usual, that this media is out to get him, that the Democrats are out to get him and it won't change their opinion", Uhlmann said.
"Let's try round two", said Holvey on Monday, appearing on NBC's Today Show.
Gillibrand told CNN on Monday that the allegations of sexual misconduct are credible and numerous and that Trump should resign.
Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and one of the most high-profile women in Trump's administration, said on Sunday that any woman who has felt mistreated by a man has the right to speak up, even if she is accusing the president.
Another woman, who did not make an allegation before the election, recently came forward.
The complainants claimed that Trump kissed them and touched them against their will while he was a famous businessman, before deciding to enter politics. "They should be heard and they should be dealt with", Haley said on CBS' Face the Nation when asked how Trump's accusers should be assessed.
"I know that he was elected", she said. The video shares the stories of 16 women who have come forward with their experiences of Trump allegedly assaulting or harassing them. "The American people knew this and voted for the president".
The White House called the claims false and "totally disputed in most cases".
Rachel Crooks, who worked as a receptionist in Trump Tower in NY, says the Republican president forcibly kissed her on the mouth after she introduced herself to him in 2005. The statement dismissed the allegations as part of a "publicity tour" and said they were driven by "political motives".
Many of Trump's accusers, contrary to the statement, were not publicly contradicted by eyewitnesses.
Holvey said she felt like she "was just simply there for his pleasure".
"I am hoping this will produce enough pressure on Congress to address it more than just for their own members, but address it in the presidency". "None of us are comfortable with it".
"For us to put ourselves out there to try to show America who this man is and especially how he views women and for them to say 'Meh, we don't care, '" Holvey told Kelly.