Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference about allegations related to his extramarital affair with his hairdresser, in Jefferson City, Mo., Wednesday, April 11, 2018. Greitens initiated a physically aggressive unwanted sexual encounter with his hairdresser and threatened to distribute a partially nude photo of her if she spoke about it, according to testimony from the woman released Wednesday by a House investigatory committee. (Julie Smith/The Jefferson City News-Tribune via AP)
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference about allegations related to his extramarital affair with his hairdresser, in Jefferson City, Mo., Wednesday, April 11, 2018. Greitens initiated a physically aggressive unwanted sexual encounter with his hairdresser and threatened to distribute a partially nude photo of her if she spoke about it, according to testimony from the woman released Wednesday by a House investigatory committee. (Julie Smith/The Jefferson City News-Tribune via AP) Credit: Julie Smith

Facing mounting calls to resign following sexual misconduct allegations, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens appears to be taking a cue from President Donald Trump as he fights for his political survival amid a #MeToo movement that has felled dozens of other prominent politicians and public figures.

Referencing events in Washington, D.C., Greitens is using similar wording as Trump to denounce accusations of unwanted sexual aggression as โ€œliesโ€ and โ€œfake chargesโ€ and the investigations into his alleged wrongdoing as a โ€œpolitical witch hunt.โ€

Trump has thus far survived. But reaction from fellow Republicans indicates Greitens may have a more difficult time โ€“ in part, because allegations about Trumpโ€™s behavior were known before his election, whereas Greitens had cultivated a campaign persona of an all-American hero.

On Thursday, Missouri Senate Majority Leader Mike Kehoe became the highest-ranking Republican state lawmaker calling for Greitens to immediately resign following the release of a legislative report detailing testimony from a woman who said Greitens slapped, grabbed, shoved and threatened her during unwanted sexual encounters. Kehoe said Greitens has lost his โ€œmoral authority.โ€

โ€œShould the governor choose not to resign, I am persuaded that he has not only burned bridges, he has blown them up to where it will be impossible for him to effectively lead the state going forward,โ€ Kehoe said.

Other Republicans calling for Greitensโ€™s resignation include Joplin businessman and megadonor David Humphreys โ€“ who gave Greitens nearly $1.3 million โ€“ and Attorney General Josh Hawley, a top challenger to Democratic U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, who also said Greitens should quit.

Republican state Sen. Rob Schaaf, a vocal Greitens critic, wrote a letter Thursday to Trump asking the commander in chief to request that Greitens, a former military officer, step down.

Greitens has vowed to remain in office and denied any violence or criminal wrongdoing in what he insists was โ€œan entirely consensual relationshipโ€ with his former St. Louis hairdresser as he was preparing to run for governor in 2015.

The legislative committeeโ€™s investigation of Greitens began after he was charged in February by a St. Louis grand jury with felony invasion of privacy for allegedly taking and transmitting a nonconsensual photo of the woman while she was partially nude. He is to go to trial May 14.

In court Thursday, his attorneys asked for the case to be dismissed. They asserted that the St. Louis prosecutorsโ€™ office had engaged in misconduct and potential perjury by initially saying that a video recorder had malfunctioned during a March interview of the woman. Greitensโ€™s attorneys said prosecutors shared the video with them Wednesday night โ€“ only after the release of the Legislatureโ€™s report โ€“ and that the womanโ€™s testimony in the video backs up Greitensโ€™s claim of a consensual encounter.

โ€œThis woman is not a victim,โ€ Greitensโ€™s attorney Jim Martin said. โ€œShe was a willing participant in everything they did, and the video goes a long way to establish that.โ€

St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner said in a court filing later Thursday that she supplied the video once her office determined it could be accessed. She accused Greitensโ€™s attorneys of using โ€œdiversionary tacticsโ€ to shift the focus from his โ€œillegal and reprehensible conduct.โ€

The womanโ€™s name never has been officially released; it is redacted from the legislative documents and she is identified only by her initials in court filings.

The womanโ€™s attorney, Scott Simpson, declined to comment on the video, citing a gag order in the criminal case.

Greitens said in a statement that the video testimony โ€œdirectly contradicted allegations in the House reportโ€ and that any allegations of โ€œcoercion, violence and assaultโ€ are โ€œfalse.โ€

Greitens repeatedly told reporters Wednesday that the allegations against him were a โ€œpolitical witch huntโ€ โ€“ a phrase similar to what Trump has used to discredit investigations into whether he had any role in Russiaโ€™s interference in the 2016 elections.

To drive home the point, Greitens added: โ€œThis is exactly like whatโ€™s happening with the witch hunts in Washington, D.C.โ€

โ€œI think it is conscious to link himself to Trump, but itโ€™s a loser. Itโ€™s not going to work,โ€ said Ed Martin, a former Missouri Republican Party chairman and Trump supporter. โ€œHe ran as something different than everybody else, and Trump was more in some ways upfront about who he was.โ€

Greitens, 44, ran on a pledge to clean up corruption while touting his golden resume. Heโ€™s a former Rhodes Scholar, Navy SEAL officer, author and motivational speaker who gained a national platform after founding The Mission Continues charity to help military veterans become involved in their communities. Unlike prior Missouri governors, his official photo hanging in government offices statewide features his full family โ€“ a wife and two young boys โ€“ rather than just himself.

โ€œThe same allegations are more damaging against Greitens than they are against Trump because of the public image of each of those people and the expectations that voters might have,โ€ said Eric Morris, an associate professor of communications at Missouri State University who studies political rhetoric.

Morris noted that the โ€œwitch huntโ€ metaphor dates to the 17th century, when numerous likely innocent people were accused by other residents of British colonies in the Americas of practicing witchcraft. Some were subsequently executed.

In modern politics, Morris said, a โ€œwitch huntโ€ is usually carried out by oneโ€™s political opponents. But he said Greitensโ€™s case doesnโ€™t cleanly fit that mold, because heโ€™s facing bipartisan criticism from lawmakers, including from some who had been among his early supporters.

โ€œThis has nothing to do with politics; itโ€™s about sending a message to all women that sexual abuse wonโ€™t be tolerated, that victims will be believed, and that the era of impunity is over,โ€ said Wendy Doyle, president and chief executive of the Kansas City-based Womenโ€™s Foundation.

Republican legislative leaders said they would start gathering signatures from colleagues next week to call themselves into a special session to consider potential disciplinary action against Greitens.

The special House investigatory committee is to make a recommendation after the regular session ends May 18 about whether Greitens should face impeachment proceedings to try to oust him. Itโ€™s also expected to release a second report focused on potential campaign finance violations involving Greitensโ€™s use of a charity donor list to raise money for his gubernatorial campaign.

Impeachment proceedings can operate independently from a criminal trial. The state constitution lays out several grounds for impeachment, including โ€œmoral turpitude,โ€ although there is disagreement on whether the offending behavior must occur while a person is in office.