A woman who accused former President Bill Clinton William (Bill) Jefferson ClintonGOP brushes back charges of hypocrisy in Supreme Court fight Battle lines drawn on precedent in Supreme Court fight Sunday shows - Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death dominates MORE of sexual misconduct slammed Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton Hillary Diane Rodham ClintonJoe Biden looks to expand election battleground into Trump country Biden leads Trump by 12 points among Catholic voters: poll The Hill's Campaign Report: Biden goes on offense MORE for the way she has handled the accusations made against her husband.

"This is no longer about Bill Clinton's transgressions or his infidelities or girlfriends or sex. ... It's not about that anymore," Kathleen Willey — a one-time White House aide who accused the former president of making aggressive, unwanted advances during a private meeting in 1993 — told the Washington Examiner.

"What it's about is the actions that his wife has taken against the women that he has raped and assaulted."

Willey, a supporter of's White House bid, also dismissed the former first lady's attempt to appeal to women voters.

"Hillary Clinton's been calling me a bimbo for 19 years, as well as Paula [Jones] and Juanita [Broaddrick] and Gennifer [Flowers]," Willey said on Sunday.

"She, you know, doesn't have any room to talk," Willey added.

Information about Willey was revealed when Matt Drudge published her name on his website in 1997.

She said Drudge got her name because Paula Jones's attorney began to look for other women allegedly targeted by the former president, and she had "told some people I trusted, and my name got out there."

"I never had any intention of telling the story of what happened to me," she said. "I was forced to."

Bill Clinton denied allegations made against him by Willey. He admitted in a deposition that "he may have kissed her on the forehead," but denied groping her and forcibly kissing her.

"They can read whatever they want to read into it," Willey said. "Of course I knew that they were going to try to discredit me." She said people she believed to have been working for the Clintons tried to silence her in many ways before she testified in the Jones case.

Willey said she has had contact with other women who have been "terrified into silence" by the Clintons, and some, she said, are considering making their stories public.

Recently, Trump has been attacking Hillary Clinton over her husband's past.

At a rally Saturday, the GOP nominee questioned Hillary Clinton's loyalty to her husband, a jab at the former president's infidelities.