At least five women have accused Republican Senate nominee Roy Moore of sexual misconduct when they were teenagers. One alleges he molested her when she was 14, and another says he sexually assaulted her when she was 16. With the election slated for Dec. 12, many Republican senators have sounded the alarm, taken back their endorsement of Moore or issued strong statements condemning him.

How does that compare to what GOP senators said about then-presidential-candidate Donald Trump after an "Access Hollywood" tape portrayed him speaking crudely about women and bragging about his behavior with women that some have characterized as sexual assault?

Trump dismissed the 2005 tape as "locker room talk," but the incident sparked ample discussion about past sexual misconduct allegations. Several Senate Republicans spoke out.

After the tapes surfaced, 12 of the 53 Republican senators in office at the time disavowed Trump and withdrew their backing. There were 14 senators who maintained support for Trump, and the rest offered partial criticism by rebuking his comments, without explicitly rescinding their endorsements.

Of the 52 current GOP senators, 25 have disavowed Moore and say he should step aside. , and the rest have offered partial criticism –– rebuking his alleged behavior with an "if true" caveat.

See how the responses compare.