A former staffer says that Donald Trump kissed her without her consent in 2016; she’s the first woman to accuse him of sexual misconduct after his presidential campaign began.

Alva Johnson, who worked for the Trump campaign in Florida, says that Trump grabbed her hand and kissed her on the lips outside a rally in Tampa in August 2016, Beth Reinhard and Alice Crites report at the Washington Post.

Her allegation is consistent with a pattern that Trump himself has described. On the 2005 Access Hollywood tape, Trump can be heard saying, “I’m automatically attracted to beautiful — I just start kissing them.”

“It’s like a magnet,” he adds. “Just kiss. I don’t even wait.”

After she heard the Access Hollywood tape, “I felt sick to my stomach,” Johnson told the Post. “That was what he did to me.”

After the tape was released by the Washington Post in October 2016, many women came forward to say that Trump had kissed or touched them without their consent, or committed other sexual misconduct. But the conduct they described all took place before Trump began his run for president. Johnson is the first woman to come forward since Trump took office, and the first to accuse him of misconduct during the campaign, according to the Post.

Trump has denied all the allegations against him, and White House press secretary Sarah Sanders called Johnson’s claim “absurd on its face.” But Johnson’s allegation, and a lawsuit she is filing in federal court, could cause trouble for him in the run-up to 2020.

Johnson says she recognized her own experience in the Access Hollywood tape

Johnson, 43, was a two-time Obama voter when she met Trump in 2015, she told the Post. But Johnson, who is black, thought Trump might be able to use his business skills to help black communities.

When she first met Trump at a 2015 rally in Birmingham, Alabama, he looked her up and down and said, “Oh, beautiful, beautiful, fantastic,” she says in her lawsuit. Despite this comment, she took a job as director of outreach and coalitions for the Trump campaign, working first in Alabama and later in Florida.

As Trump exited his RV outside the Tampa rally, she says in the lawsuit that he passed by her.

“I’ve been on the road for you since March, away from my family,” she says she told him. “You’re doing an awesome job. Go in there and kick ass.”

Then, she said, he grabbed her hand, thanked her for her work, and leaned close.

“He’s coming straight for my lips,” she told the Post. “So I turn my head, and he kisses me right on corner of my mouth, still holding my hand the entire time. Then he walks on out.”

Sanders, the White House press secretary, told the Post in a statement that “this never happened and is directly contradicted by multiple highly credible eye witness accounts.” Johnson told the Post that another campaign official and Pam Bondi, then the attorney general of Florida, saw the kiss. But both denied seeing the incident.

Johnson also told the Post that she discussed the unwanted kiss at the time with her then-boyfriend, mother, and stepfather, all of whom recalled the conversations.

Johnson kept working for the campaign, but after she heard the Access Hollywood tape, she stopped going into the office, she said. She quit about three weeks before the election. In October 2016, she also consulted with a lawyer. According to text messages provided to the Post, the lawyer found her story credible but did not take her case because “right now my practice simply cannot dive into something like that which would be so time-consuming with an uncertain outcome.”

Johnson filed suit on Monday in federal court. In addition to detailing her sexual misconduct allegation, the suit also alleges that Johnson was paid less than her white male colleagues on the campaign. A campaign spokesperson denied that allegation to the Post.

After Trump became president, Johnson twice applied for jobs with the administration, but was unsuccessful, the Post reports. She said this experience did not influence her decision to sue.

The Post updated its story on Johnson after publication when reporters found a 2017 radio interview in which Johnson praises Trump, calling him “more incredible in person than I think you would even think as you see him on TV.” She also says in the interview that she is expecting a job as “second-in-command” at the US Embassy in Lisbon. One of her lawyers told the Post she was bound by a nondisclosure agreement at the time of the interview and was “saying what she thought Trump and his supporters wanted.”

Johnson’s case would be at least the sixth legal case in which someone violated a nondisclosure agreement signed with the Trump campaign or administration, as Ronan Farrow reports at the New Yorker. The use of such agreements has been criticized, and Johnson’s suit could have repercussions for their enforceability.

Meanwhile, Johnson’s allegation comes as Trump gears up for his 2020 reelection bid. Sexual misconduct allegations against him obviously did not derail his 2016 campaign. But that was before the growing #MeToo movement ushered in a nationwide reckoning around sexual harassment and assault.

Republican voters have generally been more skeptical around #MeToo allegations than Democrats, but some Republican women have become frustrated with their party’s relative inaction around sexual misconduct. A new accusation against Trump, especially coupled with a federal lawsuit, could shine new light on an issue the Trump campaign likely hoped to put behind them.

Johnson, for her part, says she’s been unable to forget what happened to her in 2016.

“I don’t sleep,” she told the Post. “I wake up at 4 in the morning looking at the news. I feel guilty. The only thing I did was show up for work one day.”