Alabama U.S. Senate candidate again denies alleged sexual misconduct

Amid sexual assault accusations, some call for Roy Moore to resign from Senate race

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Amid sexual assault accusations, some call for Roy Moore to resign from Senate race

Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) reacts to news that the Alabama Senate Republican candidate Roy Moore was accused of sexual assault, and said that if the accusation is true, Moore needs to step down.

Former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, the Republican insurgent running for the U.S. Senate, on Saturday again flatly denied he had initiated a sexual encounter in 1979 with a 14-year-old girl, insisting the accusation was "fake news."

In his first public appearance since a Washington Post story on Thursday detailing allegations of sexual misconduct, Moore portrayed himself a victim of a baseless attack on his character.

“I am not guilty of sexual misconduct with anyone,” the conservative Christian told an audience of about 150 people at a Veterans Day event at a public library in Vestavia Hills, outside Birmingham, the state capital.

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The story was "a desperate attempt to ruin my career," Moore said. "It is completely false and untrue.”

Moore, who defeated an establishment Republican in a hard-fought primary battle, said the allegations were an attempt to sabotage his candidacy, noting they surfaced just four weeks before a special election to fill a seat vacated by Jeff Sessions when he became U.S. attorney general earlier this year. Before the scandal broke, Moore was the strong favorite to win in a state that has not elected a Democrat to the Senate in a quarter of a century.


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