Donald Trump pledged Saturday that he will bring lawsuits against each of the women who have accused him of sexual misconduct during his campaign.

'Every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign,' he told an invited audience in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

'Total fabrication. The events never happened. Never.'

He made the comments as he laid out his policy platform for his first 100 days in charge, if he wins the General Election.

The Republican candidate addressed a small audience in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, near the site of the historic 1863 Civil War Battle and the subsequent address by President Lincoln.

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'Liars': Trump vowed to sue the women who have accused him of sexual assault during his campaign

'Every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign,' he told an invited audience in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

'All of these liars will be sued after the election is over,' he said.

Several people have come forward to accuse Trump of sexual misconduct.

On Saturday afternoon, Jessica Drake, a 42-year-old adult film actress and director, accused Trump of offering her $10,000 to spend the night with him in his penthouse suite after a 2006 golf tournament.

Drake said she met the billionaire at the event in Lake Tahoe in 2006, a year after he married his wife Melania.

Drake, speaking at a press conference in Los Angeles on Saturday, said he repeatedly asked her to spend the night with him and offered her $10,000 to do so despite her rejections.

She had earlier gone to his penthouse suite with two female friends, all of whom he kissed 'without permission' and hugged 'tightly' while dressed in pajamas, she alleged.

Jessica Drake, an adult film star, accused Donald Trump of offering her $10,000 to spend the night with him in 2006 at a press conference on Saturday (above)

The billionaire Republican candidate has constantly denied any wrongdoing.

Trump also said he will litigate against the Democratic Party to determine the extent to which it monkey-wrenched his presidential bid.

The claims of the women have vexed the Trump camp for more than a month.

'A simple phone call placed to the biggest newspapers or television networks gets them wall-to-wall coverage,' Trump complained.

He said the media employ 'virtually no fact-checking whatsoever' to vet the allegations.

'The dishonest mainstream media,' he said, are 'corrupt.'

'They lie and fabricate stories to make a candidate that is not their preferred choice look as bad and even dangerous as possible.'

'They're trying desperately to suppress my vote and the voices of the American people,' he said.

After his speech, Trump was given a tour of the high-water mark of the Confederacy at Gettysburg National Military Park

Interpretive park ranger Caitlin Kostic (center in the hat) points out parts of the site of the famous Civil Water battle in Pennsylvania

Trump's tie and hair blew in the wind as he spoke to surrogate and former New York City Mayor, Rudy Giuliani (right)

Hillary Clinton addressed the impending Trump lawsuits tonight as she spoke to reporters riding her campaign plane.

'I saw where our opponent Donald Trump went to Gettysburg, one of the most extraordinary places in American history and basically said if he's president he'll spend his time suing women who have made charges against him based on his behavior,' she said.

Her running mate at her side, the Democratic presidential candidate said she and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine 'are going to keep talking about what we want to do if we're given the great honor of serving as president and vice president.'

Kaine commented on the fact that Trump 'seemed most personally invested in...all the scores that he needs to settle with people that he's mad at.'

'Al along, he's been running a self-interested, me-first campaign not an America-first campaign,' Kaine accused. 'And here he is saying that in the first 100 days I'm not changing.'

On Thursday, Karena Virginia came forward and accused Trump.

She claimed that she was waiting for her car to go home while attending the US Open tennis tournament in 1998 when Trump began to speak about her with a group of male friends.

He then walked up to her and allegedly touched her right breast, telling her repeatedly: 'Do you know who I am?'

On Thursday, Karena Virginia came forward and accused Trump.

She claimed that she was waiting for her car to go home while attending the US Open tennis tournament in 1998 when Trump began to speak about her with a group of male friends.

He then walked up to her and allegedly touched her right breast, telling her repeatedly: 'Do you know who I am?'

On Thursday, Karena Virginia came forward and accused Trump of groping her without her consent

Mindy McGillivray (left) and Jessica Leeds (right) are two other women who have come forward accusing Trump of sexual misconduct

Trump also said he will litigate against the Democratic Party to determine the extent to which it monkey-wrenched his presidential bid

Trump spoke about his accusers at the debate on Thursday, saying: 'I don't know those people,' before saying that Hillary Clinton's 'sleazy' campaign got these women to come forward.

'It was lies, and it was fiction,' said Trump.

Tonight Clinton said, 'That is just not accurate.'

'I debated him for four and a half hours. I don't even think about responding to him anymore,' she said of his claims that the media's in her pocket.

'He can say whatever he wants, he can run his campaign however he wants to. He can go off on tangents, he can go to Gettysburg and say he's going to sue women who've made accusations against him.

'I'm going to keep talking about what we want to do, what we think the country deserves from the next president and vice president. And actually, when it comes right down to it I think that's what people end up voting on,' Clinton told reporters during the media avail on her plane.

At the top of Friday's press conference Gloria Allred took some time to speak about Trump and his recent denials about this wave of ten sex assault claims over the pats two weeks.

'His response is ludicrous,' said Allred, before going on to speak about Virginia.

'Today’s victim also is noteworthy in that her allegations demonstrate how Mr. Trump selects his victims at random.'

Allred went on to say: 'Mr. Trump, the fact that you are a celebrity does not give you a license to violate women.

'To the contrary it gives you more responsibility to respect women as many women will look up to you as a role model because of your celebrity status.

'To show respect for women means that you need to respect their boundaries and not to act on your impulses to grab and grope at your pleasure.'

She closed out her remarks by saying: 'You have called yourself a victim, but it is not you that is the victim. Given the allegations against you you should never again utter the words that you respect women.

'Gettysburg was the moment when the war turned,' a senior campaign aide said Friday night in a hopeful comparison with this year's presidential election

TIMELINE: WHEN DONALD TRUMP HAS BEEN ACCUSED OF ASSAULT, GROPING OR LEWD BEHAVIOR 1980 - Jessica Leeds Jessica Leeds Jessica Leeds, a 74-year-old former businesswoman who lives in Manhattan, told the New York Times on Wednesday she was 'assaulted' by Trump on a flight when she was 38. Leeds explained how she was sat beside Trump in first class on a flight, when the Republican nominee lifted the arm-rest between then and allegedly began touching her. 'He was like an octopus,' she told the Times. 'His hands were everywhere.' Early 1990s - Kristin Anderson Kristin Anderson Kristin Anderson was out with friends, chatting up a storm at a Manhattan nightspot, when she felt fingers creep up her miniskirt, slide up her inner thigh and then touch her vagina through her panties. The man who touched her was none other than Donald Trump, Anderson - now 46 - told theWashington Post. She said the incident took place in the early 1990s, when she was in her early twenties and an aspiring model. 1993 - Jill Harth Jill Harth Jill Harth, a makeup artist, accused Trump of 'attempted rape' stemming from an incident in 1993. Harth told the Guardian the incident in question took place during a visit to Trump's Mar-a-Lago mansion in January of that year. 'He pushed me up against the wall, and had his hands all over me and tried to get up my dress again,' she told the newspaper. 'I had to physically say: 'What are you doing? Stop it.'' 1993 - Vendela Kirsebom Former supermodel Vendela Kirsebom exclusively told DailyMail.com that Donald Trump's 'vulgar' and 'sexist' remarks about the size of women's breasts forced her to switch tables at a White House dinner party. The sports Illustrated cover model claims her night at a 1993 Vanity Fair event was ruined because she was sat next to the billionaire. Recalling the 'excruciating' night, Kirsebom, 49, said: 'Everything he said was so vulgar. 'I couldn't listen to his nonsense for an entire night so I asked if I could be moved.' 1996 - Lisa Boyne Lisa Boyne Lisa Boyne, CEO of a health food company, claims that in the summer of 1996 she saw Trump make a series of women walk up and down a restaurant table so that he could announce whether they were wearing underwear. 'It was the most offensive scene I've ever been a part of,' she told The Huffington Post Thursday. 'I wanted to get the heck out of there.' According to Boyne, she and friend Sonja Tremont - better known today as Sonja Morgan of 'Real Housewives of New York' - had been invited to dinner in Manhattan with Trump and late modelling agent John Casablancas. 1997 - Miss USA contestant Temple Taggart Temple Taggart Temple Taggart, a former Miss Utah, told the New York Times earlier this year that Trump kissed her on the lips during the pageant. 'I thought, 'Oh my God, gross'... I think there were a few other girls that he kissed on the mouth. I was like 'Wow, that's inappropriate',' she told the newspaper. Taggart has also sat down for an interview with NBC News. 'When I first heard the leaked tape, it's very unsettling... you don't want to hear anyone talking about women like that,' she said in a promotion clip for the interview. 1997 - Cathy Heller Cathy Heller Cathy Heller, now 63, claims the billionaire kissed her on the mouth without her consent in 1997 while she attended a Mother's Day luncheon with her family at Trump's Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. She told The Guardian on Saturday: ' He took my hand, and grabbed me, and went for the lips,' she said. She claims she held back but he persevered. 'And he said: "Oh, come on." He was strong. He grabbed me and went for my mouth and went for my lips.' Trump denied the accusation, claiming she was motivated by a personal vendetta to have her family's membership fees reimbursed. 1998 - Karena Virginia Karena Virginia Karena Virginia said she was waiting for her car to go home while attending the US Open tennis tournament in 1998 when Trump began to speak about her with a group of male friends. He allegedly touched her right breast, telling her repeatedly: 'Do you know who I am?' Virginia was 27 at the time. The married yoga instructor and mother of two said she is not looking to file a lawsuit against Trump. At a press conference alongside attorney Gloria Allred on October 21, 2016, she said: 'I believe we are in a moment of crisis and I believe we are all needing to find inner peace,' said Virginia, who did not answer questions after she spoke. 'This is how I’m finding my inner peace.' 2003 - Mindy McGillivray Mindy McGillivray Mindy McGillivray, 36, told the Palm Beach Post that Trump grabbed her backside after she helped a photographer who was covering a concert at Trump's Mar-a-Lago mansion. McGillivray, who was 23 at the time, said she was with Ken Davidoff at the Mar-a-Lago on January 24, 2003. 'All of a sudden I felt a grab, a little nudge. I think it's Ken's camera bag, that was my first instinct,' she told the newspaper. 'I turn around and there's Donald. He sort of looked away quickly.' 2005 - Rachel Crooks Rachel Crooks Rachel Crooks was a 22-year-old working as a receptionist at Bayrock Group, a real estate company based in Trump Tower in Manhattan, when she says Trump kissed her on the mouth without permission while in an elevator in 2005. 'It was so inappropriate,' Ms. Crooks told the New York Times. 'I was so upset that he thought I was so insignificant that he could do that.' Crooks told the newspaper the incident took place after she shook hands with Trump in an elevator and he allegedly refused to let go. She says he then began kissing her on the cheeks, before then kissing her lips. 2005 - Natasha Stoynoff Natasha Stoynoff Natasha Stoynoff recounted how she had traveled to Mar-a-Largo to interview Trump and his wife, Melania, in December 2005. She said Donald took her into a room he really wanted to see, before forcing himself on her. 'We walked into that room alone, and Trump shut the door behind us. I turned around, and within seconds, he was pushing me against the wall, and forcing his tongue down my throat,' she wrote for People. Stoynoff went on to say how she was rescued when a butler walked in, however when the two were alone again shortly after Trump told her they were 'going to have an affair'. 2006 - Jessica Drake Jessica Drake Jessica Drake, a 42-year-old adult film actress and director, accused Trump of offering her $10,000 to spend the night with him in his penthouse suite after a 2006 golf tournament. She said she met the billionaire at the event in Lake Tahoe in 2006, a year after he married his wife Melania. Drake said he repeatedly asked her to spend the night with him and offered her $10,000 to do so despite her rejections. She had earlier gone to his penthouse suite with two female friends, all of whom he kissed 'without permission' and hugged 'tightly' while dressed in pajamas, she alleged. 2007 - Summer Zervos - contestant on The Apprentice Summer Zervos Summer Zervos, who was a contestant on the fifth season of The Apprentice, said Trump groped and kissed her in his room at the Beverly Hills Hotel in 2007. She claims that she reached out to Trump a year after she left the show to speak about possible business opportunities, and when she met with him he kissed her 'open mouthed' multiple times, and at one point placed his hand on her breast. She claims he then had her lie in bed with him she said telling her he wanted to watch 'telly telly', but soon after began 'thrusting his genitals' at her despite her pleas asking him to stop. Zervos broke down in tears throughout press conference, saying at one point: 'You do not have the right to treat women as sexual objects just because you are a star.' 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'The women that have come forward deserve tremendous respect for having had the courage to speak truth to power.

'They will continue to speak out and be heard and we are proud of each and every one of them.'

Touting 'the kind of change that only arrives once in a lifetime,' Trump told an audience of about 300 invited guests on Saturday near the site of the famous battle that he will 'drain the swamp' in Washington, replacing the current government 'with a new government of, by and for the people.'

TRUMP'S ANTI-CORRUPTION TO-DO LIST 1. Constitutional Amendment to impose term limits on members of Congress 2. Hiring freeze on federal employees to reduce the workforce through attrition 3. Requirement to eliminate two federal regulations for every new one 4. Five-year-ban on White House and Congressional officials becoming lobbyists 5. Lifetime ban on White House officials lobbying for foreign governments 6. Complete ban on foreign lobbyists raising money for American elections Advertisement

The symbolism factor was high, with a campaign aide telling reporters Friday night that the Civil War battle in Gettysburg memorialized by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863 'was the moment when the war turned.'

Trump's own war – a two-front clash against both Clinton and the mass media – will come to a climax on November 8 when most Americans will choose a leader for the next four years.

He summed up the substance of his campaign in a 'Contract With The American Voter' – a point-by-point set of initiatives that track with the themes he has focused on for 16 months.

Included are six anti-corruption pledges, seven actions related to jobs and trade and five on immigration and the 'rule of law.'

He ended his contract with a list of 10 bills he said he would try to quickly shepherd through Congress.

Aides promised the Republican nominee would put more meat on the bare bones of some of his mainstay pledges, but little in the speech was new.

Instead, Trump formalized his signature pledges by announcing a legislative package that he said he would help shepherd through Congress.

He also reiterated a laundry list of executive actions that he has sketched out in speeches stretching back more than a year.

The small crowd gathered in a hotel ballroom was a far cry from the 10,000 rowdy fans he typically draws, but they brought moments of enthusiasm.

Trump made the comments about his accusers as he laid out his policy platform for his first 100 days in charge, if he wins the General Election

The audience rose to their feet and chanted 'Trump! Trump! Trump!' as he entered. One man shouted: 'We love you!'

TRUMP'S PLEDGES ON IMMIGRATION AND 'RULE OF LAW' 1. Cancel Obama's 'unconstitutional' executive actions, memoranda and orders 2. Pick a conservative replacement for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia 3. Cancel all federal funding to 'sanctuary cities' that harbor illegal immigrants 4. Begin removing the 2 million criminal illegal immigrants from the U.S., and cancel visas to countries that won’t repatriate them 5. Suspend immigration from terror-prone regions where incoming people can't be properly vetted. Advertisement

And in a sign of how deeply the GOP's most negative campaign slogan has taken root, half the crowd chanted 'Lock her up!' at the first mention of Hillary Clinton's name.

The two loudest applause lines were Trump's pledge to repeal and replace the Obamacare medical insurance law and to end federal funding for 'sanctuary cities' – Democrat-run municipalities that offer safe harbor to illegal immigrants.

Saturday marked the second time Trump has engaged in the customary 'first 100 days' routine: In June he tacked a laundry list on to a speech castigating the Clintons for profiting from a 'special interest monopoly' in Washington.

That set of promises was predictably vague, including pledges to 'appoint judges who will uphold the Constitution,' 'stand up to countries that cheat on trade' and 'pass massive tax reform to create millions of new jobs.'