The Latest: Roy Moore protesters dress as 'handmaids'
FAIRHOPE, Ala. (AP) — The Latest on the Alabama Senate race (all times local):
7:40 p.m.
About three dozen demonstrators are protesting outside a rally for Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore that's being headlined by former White House adviser Steve Bannon.
The group — mostly women — is carrying "No Moore" signs and chanting, "We want a senator, not a predator."
Many in the group are dressed in costumes from Margaret Atwood's dystopian novel "The Handmaid's Tale," in which women are powerless. They say it demonstrates the silencing of the women who have accused Moore of sexual misconduct.
Law enforcement officers told them to leave the private event venue and led them to a spot beside a nearby public road.
Susan Taylor of Fairhope, one of the demonstrators dressed as a handmaid, says Moore does not represent the state she knows.
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5:10 p.m.
GOP Sen. Jeff Flake is showing his opposition to Republican Roy Moore's candidacy for Alabama Senate by donating to the campaign of Moore's Democratic opponent.
Flake tweeted a picture of a $100 check from him to Doug Jones' campaign Tuesday. In the memo it said, "Country over Party."
Other Republicans in Washington have also come out against Moore over accusations of inappropriate sexual behavior, but he has strong support from state Republicans.
Two women have accused the 70-year-old Moore of sexually assaulting or molesting them decades ago, when they were 14 and 16 and he was in his 30s. At least five other women have said he pursued romantic relationships with them around the same time, when they were teenagers.
He has denied the allegations and called the women liars.
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3:15 p.m.
The top Republican in the Senate says if Alabama candidate Roy Moore is elected, he would "immediately have an issue with the Ethics Committee" over allegations of sexual misconduct with teenagers decades ago.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters Tuesday that the 70-year-old Moore would have to be sworn in if he wins the Dec. 12 special election, based on the 1969 Supreme Court ruling involving Democratic New York Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
The House had refused to seat Powell after allegations of personal and financial misconduct. The Supreme Court ruled in his favor, saying the House acted unconstitutionally by not seating him.
Moore faces Democrat Doug Jones in the special election. National Republicans have said he should step aside, but he has strong support from state Republicans.
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2:30 p.m.
Roy Moore's Democratic opponent in the Alabama Senate race says he did his part as a prosecutor to ensure that "men who hurt little girls should go to jail and not the United States Senate."
Doug Jones told supporters Tuesday in Birmingham that the Republican Moore is an embarrassment to the state.
Jones says it's "crystal clear" that Moore's accusers are telling the truth when they say Moore made improper sexual advances against them when they were teens and he was a deputy district attorney in his 30s. The now-70-year-old Moore says his accusers are lying.
Jones' comments came hours before a Moore rally in Alabama with former White House strategist Steve Bannon.
The special election to fill the seat once held by Republican Jeff Sessions is Dec. 12.