A trio of the president's accusers reemerged on Monday to hound him for sexually harassing them.

Samantha Holvey, Jessica Leeds and Rachel Crooks had previously made allegations against Trump and appeared on Megyn Kelly 'Today' to demand justice as the White House resumed its claim that the issue had been litigated in last year's election.

'All of a sudden, he's all over, me, kissing and groping and groping and kissing,' said Leeds, a self-proclaimed Democrat, who says she revealed her story because 'I wanted people to know what kind of a person that Trump really is...what a pervert he is.'

Leeds claims that Trump assaulted on a plane in the '70s and called her a 'c***' when he ran into her some time later at a party in New York while he was still married to his first wife Ivana.

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A trio of the president's accusers reemerged on Monday to hound him for sexually harassing them. Samantha Holvey (center) Jessica Leeds (right) and Rachel Crooks (left) had previously made allegations against Trump in last year's election and appeared on Megyn Kelly 'Today' to demand justice

'All of a sudden, he's all over, me, kissing and groping and groping and kissing,' said Leeds, a self-proclaimed Democrat, who says she revealed her story because 'I wanted people to know what kind of a person that Trump really is...what a pervert he is'

'I was so uncomfortable, and a little, yeah, threatened, like I didn't have a choice,' Crooks on Monday said

Holvey, a former Miss USA contestant, said that Trump came back stage in 2006 and reviewed the women while they were indecent. 'I was not a human being. I did not have a brain I did not have a personality. I was just simply there for his pleasure'

The two other women said that Trump's conduct while he was a businessman left them 'shocked' and 'devastated' and feeling 'very gross' and 'very dirty.'

'I was so uncomfortable, and a little, yeah, threatened, like I didn't have a choice,' Crooks on Monday said.

Kelly's program was preempted in New York as an explosion went off in Manhattan that the authorities have said was an attempted terror attack. Her show aired in other parts of the country, however, including Washington.

Holvey, a former Miss USA contestant, said that Trump came back stage in 2006 and reviewed the women while they were indecent.

She recalled thinking at the time that it would be a meet and great with Trump. But she says it wasn't.

The former Miss North Carolina says Trump was 'just looking me over like I was just a piece of meat.'

'I was not a human being. I did not have a brain I did not have a personality. I was just simply there for his pleasure. It left me feeling very gross, very dirty, like this is not what I signed up for.'

Holvey said that no other director of a pageant came backstage to ogle the contestants.

Leeds claims that Trump assaulted on a plane in the '70s and called her a 'c***' when he ran into her some time later at a party in New York while he was still married to his first wife Ivana

Crooks claims that Trump assaulted her near the elevator bank in his office building. The office she worked in had rental space there. She says it started with him hitting on her.

'And I think his core supporters do know. I mean, I think they recognize. But he's their dog, so they're gonna stick with their dog,' Leeds said. Kelly chimed in: 'Because he's got the right team jersey on'

'And then he kissed me on the lips, and I was shocked, yeah, I mean, devastated, and it happened so fast, I guess, I wish I would have been courageous enough to be like, what's going on, and you need to stop this.'

After declining comment on the matter initially, the White House sprung a statement on Kelly in the middle of her program.

'These false claims, totally disputed in most cases by eyewitness accounts, were addressed at length during last year's campaign,' the statement said, 'and the American people voiced their judgement by delivering a decisive victory.'

It went on to say that the 'timing and absurdity' of the accusers' claims, along with their 'publicly tour' they've started 'only further confirms the political motives behind them.'

'It's laughable,' Crooks replied a moment later.

Crooks has contemporaneous emails that she sent her sister at the time of the alleged assault, in January of 2006, when Trump was already married to his third wife Melania. She said Monday that she'd be 'more than happy' for security footage to come out that proves the accuracy of her story.

She added, 'He owns the building. I doubt that's going to happen.'

Leeds says she began telling her story publicly once it became clear that Trump was serious about running for president.

As to whether the Democrat thought her allegation would be enough to keep him out of office, she said, 'I don't think I thought I had that kind of power. But I really wanted people to know who he is and what he is.

'And I think his core supporters do know. I mean, I think they recognize. But he's their dog, so they're gonna stick with their dog,' she said.

Kelly chimed in: 'Because he's got the right team jersey on.'

The accusations against Trump have received new attention now that he's thrown his weight behind Alabama Republican Roy Moore.

Moore has been accused of sexual misconduct by a number of women, including one who says he touched her when she was just 14 years old and he was 32.

Trump has separately been accused of misconduct by 16 women, including Crooks, Leeds and Holvey.

Leeds, a 75-year-old former businesswoman who lives in Manhattan, told the New York Times last year that she was 'assaulted' by Trump on a flight when she was 38.

She claims she was seated beside Trump in first class, when the then-businessman lifted the arm-rest between them. He allegedly put his hand up her skirt.

'He was like an octopus,' she told the Times. 'His hands were everywhere.'

Retelling her story to Kelly on Today, Leeds said: 'I'm not a small person. I managed to wiggle out and stand up, grab my purse, and I went to the back of the airplane.'

She has been accused of faking the information because the plane wouldn't have had an arm rest in first class at the time of the alleged incident. Leeds admitted today that 'I don't remember what happened to the arm rest' - she just recalls that there wasn't one stopping Trump from assaulting her.

Crooks was a 22-year-old working as a receptionist at Bayrock Group, a real estate company based in Trump Tower in Manhattan, when she says Trump kissed her on the mouth without permission in 2005.

'It was so inappropriate,' Crooks told the New York Times. 'I was so upset that he thought I was so insignificant that he could do that.'

She told the newspaper before the election that the incident took place after she shook hands with Trump in an elevator and he allegedly refused to let go. She says he then began kissing her on the cheeks, before then kissing her lips.

On the Today show she said: 'You feel like you have to say yes to guys. You don want to be the nasty girl. The mean girl who doesn't comply and puts up a fight. I guess..I wish I had been stronger then. I mean I feel differently now. I'd like to think things would be a lot different now. '

'These false claims, totally disputed in most cases by eyewitness accounts, were addressed at length during last year's campaign,' a statement from the White House on Trump's behalf said, 'and the American people voiced their judgement by delivering a decisive victory'

Holvey claims that as a 20-year-old representing North Carolina in the 2006 Miss USA pageant, Trump inspected her and other contestants before the competition.

She has said she was 'disgusted' by the now-president's behavior in an interview last year with CNN and it was 'the dirtiest I felt in my entire life.

'He would step in front of each girl and look you over from head to toe like we were just meat, we were just sexual objects, that we were not people,' she told the network then.

Other contestants from Trump's pageants have also said the acted inappropriately.

As a private citizen, the president himself boasted about how his celebrity gave him the ability to grab women with impunity and forcibly kiss them on the now-infamous Access Hollywood tape.

Trump said he would 'grab them by the p****.' Then he added: 'When you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything.'

On the heels of the October 2016 release of the hot mic video, more women accused Trump, the GOP nominee for president at the time, of sexual misdeeds, including groping, kissing and sexual harassment.

While the recording was expected to tank Trump in the November election, the candidate eventually rebounded, in part because he muddied the waters by pointing to Bill Clinton's alleged and admitted sexual misdeeds and characterizing his rival Hillary Clinton as complicit.

Leeds said after the taping at a press conference, 'We’re at the position now where in some areas of our society, people are being held accountable for unwanted behavior, but we are not holding our president accountable for what he is and who he is'

And while three members of Congress said they were leaving last week over their own sexually scandals – Sen. Al Franken, Rep. John Conyers and Rep. Trent Franks – and Hollywood heavyweights such as Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey have been banished, Trump has been bulletproofed against similar allegations.

The White House sided with Trump in October of this year and suggested that he women accusing him were all liars.

'We've been clear on that in the beginning, and the President's spoken on that,' press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said.

Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley meanwhile encouraged women to speak out against sexual harassment and assault – including against President Trump on Sunday.

Appearing Sunday on Face the Nation, CBS' John Dickerson asked the former South Carolina governor, the state's first female executive, how people should 'assess the accusers of the president.

'Women who accuse anyone should be heard,' Haley replied. 'They should be heard, and they should be dealt with.'

Leeds told said Monday that she would like Trump to have a 'reckoning' over what he did.

'I would like to see that he’s not Teflon,' she said, 'and that he acknowledged in some fashion or another and be called to answer to the charges.'

She said after the taping at a press conference that accused harassers are being held accountable 'except for our president.'

'We’re at the position now where in some areas of our society, people are being held accountable for unwanted behavior, but we are not holding our president accountable for what he is and who he is,' Leeds said.

Crooks said an congressional investigation would be 'fair' considering that senators were planning to investigate their Franken until he resigned.

Franken was under the scrutiny of the Senate Ethics Committee because he was a senator, however, and the body is inherently responsible for policing members' conduct.

Bill Clinton's impeachment in the House for perjury and obstruction of justice over his affair with Monica Lewinsky stemmed from an independent counsel investigation into his real estate investments and White House travel office firings that were said to be politically-motivated.

President Trump and his associates, some of whom work at the White House, are being probed by a special counsel who reports to the Department of Justice. Special Counsel Robert Mueller has not indicated that he interested in pursuing any of the allegations against Trump outside of collusion and obstruction of justice in the firing of ex-FBI Director James Comey, however. Most of the sex assault allegations decades old and stretch beyond the statue of limitations, in the first place.

A fourth accuser, Lisa Boyne, called into the press conference on Monday to 'demand that Donald Trump step down like Al Franken.'

'Because what he’s acknowledged, what he’s made appropriate culturally is a thousand times worse than anything Al Franken has done,' she said.

Boyne has accused Trump of looking up models' skirts at a 1996 dinner.

At the presser, Holvey said she believes Trump should resign, then added, 'I don’t think he ever will.'