Republican officials in Alabama are doubling down on Senate candidate Roy Moore in spite of accusations that he dated teen girls in his 30s, as a photo has emerged of one accuser working at a Hillary Clinton campaign event.

Moore has vehemently denied a bombshell Washington Post report detailing claims from several women that he dated them in the 1970s, including one who was 14 at the time.

While the GOP establishment moved quickly to cut ties with insurgent candidate Moore, who was heavily backed by President Donald Trump's strategist Steve Bannon, local party officials were not so skittish.

'I think it's going to affect the turnout — I think the turnout is going to be larger for Roy Moore,' Calhoun County Republican Party Chairman James Bennett told the Montgomery Advertiser.

Moore accuser Deborah Wesson Gibson is seen working as a sign language interpreter at a Hillary Clinton campaign rally in Florida in 2016. She claims Moore kissed her on a date

Roy Moore (center) has vehemently denied a bombshell Washington Post report detailing claims from several women that he dated them in the 1970s, including one who was 14

'I got more calls yesterday for Roy Moore signs than I have since the primary,' Bennett said. 'I think (Moore supporters) are very skeptical of the reporting four weeks before the election. They’re going to withhold their judgment, but they’re not going to withhold their vote.'

Other Alabama Republicans said they suspected the allegations stemmed from the Washington establishment, in a desperate attempt to keep outsider candidate Moore from reaching DC.

'I mean, how do you react to an allegation that supposedly happened 38 years ago?' Republican State Sentator Dick Brewbaker told Alabama Public Radio.

'I do not buy the idea that suddenly because it's now the US Senate, she felt like she had to come forward. I mean, come on.'

The local support for Moore stood in stark contrast to the reaction from the GOP establishment, after Senate Republicans cut fundraising ties with the candidate on Friday.

Meanwhile, a photo emerged on Friday showing one of Moore's accusers working at a Clinton campaign event.

Photos have emerged showing Gibson working at several Democrat campaign events, including this one for Patrick Murphy in 2016

Gibson is seen with former Vice President Joe Biden after working at a campaign event during the 2012 election in Florida

Deborah Wesson Gibson is seen working at a Clinton campaign rally in Florida and posing with former Vice President Joe Biden in pictures her company posted online.

Gibson owns the Delray Beach, Florida-based interpreting company Signs of Excellence.

In the photos, Gibson also seen working at campaign events or posing with former Representative Patrick Murphy and Senator Bill Nelson, both Democrats.

Gibson claimed in the report that Moore had dated her for several months when she was 17 and he was 34.

She recalled that he read her poetry and played his guitar for her, and that he kissed her twice in the course of the relationship.

The age of consent in Alabama is 16, but the report also detailed claims by another woman, Leigh Corfman, who said that Moore sexually touched her over her underwear when she was 14.

Moore has emphatically denied ever meeting Corfman, saying: 'I never knew this woman, I never met this woman and these charges are politically motivated.'