After walking off stage at a Birmingham rally Thursday where a dozen supporters spoke on his behalf, Roy Moore tweeted.

Moore, the Republican Senate nominee, again ripped Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in accusing him of trying "to steal" the Dec. 12 election from Alabama voters.

He also vowed to continue making the stand of his innocence to allegations made against him until the end of his life.

"I've taken a stand in the past, I'll take a stand in the future and I'll quit standing when they lay me in that box and put me in the ground," Moore said on Twitter.

Moore has repeatedly denied the allegations made by women over the past week that they had uncomfortable romantic or sexual encounters with him as teens almost 40 years ago when he was in his 30s.

And he's made it clear he has no plans to exit the race, despite calls from Washington and the loss of endorsements from senators and a canceled fundraising agreement with the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

But the latest comment on Twitter perhaps showed Moore at his most defiant with the election less than four weeks away.

Moore spoke briefly at the end of the rally, again denying allegations that he had the inappropriate encounters

The tweets were posted within minutes of him leaving the stage at the rally.

"This is an effort by Mitch McConnell and his cronies to steal this election from the people of Alabama and they will not stand for it!" Moore tweeted.

He followed that tweet minutes later by again calling for McConnell to resign as leader of the Senate.

"I'm gonna tell you who needs to step down, that's Mitch McConnell," Moore said on Twitter.

McConnell has said he believes Moore's accusers and that the former Alabama chief justice should step aside and leave the Senate race. He faces Democrat Doug Jones at the polls next month.

Moore also retweeted a message from AL.com reporter Howard Koplowitz stating that the Alabama Republican Party had announced it would stand behind Moore. The Alabama GOP steering committee met Wednesday and decided not to withdraw its support of Moore's candidacy.

.@ALGOP: "Alabamians will be the ultimate jury in this election- not the media or those from afar." https://t.co/BJYc6ehsF0 #ALSen #alpolitics — Howard Koplowitz (@HowardKoplowitz) November 16, 2017

Rally organizers said they would take questions from the media about campaign issues. When the first couple of questions focused on the allegations, Moore and his wife, Kayla, walked off the stage.

Before leaving the stage, Moore said that he's gotten no questions from the media about campaign issues since the allegations were first reported Nov. 9. The only time Moore has taken questions from the media since the allegations was in interviews with Fox News personality Sean Hannity.

McConnell has become a favorite target of Moore's on Twitter since the allegations broke. In the past week, Moore has criticized McConnell by name in eight tweets and twice called for him to be removed as Leader.

Before the allegations broke, Moore did not mention McConnell on Twitter since his Sept. 26 GOP primary runoff victory over Luther Strange.

Updated today, Nov. 16, 2017, at 3:24 p.m. with new tweet from Moore.