Presidential races

New Clinton super PAC ad hits Trump’s remarks about women

A super PAC supporting Hillary Clinton unveiled a new ad Monday urging women voters to hit back at Donald Trump’s controversial remarks.

The Priorities USA clip collects Trump’s comments about women and plays them over footage of both trailblazing and ordinary female Americans.

{mosads}The new spot features pioneering women including former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, civil rights activist Rosa Parks, and Clinton, the first woman nominated for the presidency by a major political party.

Those images are contrasted with Trump’s remarks.

“She ate like a pig,” Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, says in one clip. “[She’s] a disgusting pig. She’s a slob. Does she have a fat a–? Absolutely.”

“[Her] boob job is terrible,” he adds in another. “Her lips are too big — solid 4. Flat-chested, it’s very hard to be a 10.”

The commercial ends with portions of a 2005 audio recording that emerged earlier this month featuring Trump discussing grabbing and kissing women without their consent.

“I moved on her like a b—-,” he says during the taped conversation with former “Access Hollywood” host Billy Bush.

“How does he make you feel?” the ad asks female viewers as it ends. “Tell him — vote.”

The ad is set to singer Carole King’s “Natural Woman,” performed by her daughter Louise Goffin, according to CNN.

King has appeared at multiple events with Clinton throughout 2016, including fundraisers for the Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign.

Goffin and King gave Priorities USA permission to use “Natural Woman” in the ad targeting Trump, according to Justin Barasky, the group’s spokesman.

Barasky said the commercial will run in Ohio, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Iowa, Nevada and Georgia through Election Day.

After the 2005 Trump tape became public, 12 women have come forward accusing the billionaire of kissing or groping them without consent in the past.

Trump fiercely denies the allegations and has accused the media of rigging the presidential election for Clinton, the Democratic nominee.