​Rep. Rashida Tlaib ​—​ one of the four members of “the Squad” who President Trump said need to “go back” to where ​they came from — returned to her hometown Monday and insisted she’s not budging.

“I’m not going nowhere,” Tlaib said to cheers at the NAACP convention in Detroit. “Not until I impeach this president.”

Tlaib, who drew fire for calling Trump “a mother f—ker,” didn’t mention the president directly.

But she urged the crowd to keep on fighting for bold action to improve wages, address climate change and demand clean water.

“People are going to say this is too bold, too radical, too far left and to reject it,” Tlaib said. “That’s how they discredit movements like this.”

The freshman rep, along with Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), are the first Muslim women elected to Congress.

Their progressive agendas, along with those of Rep​s​. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley, have put them at odds with Speaker Nancy Pelosi at times.

In Detroit on Monday, she was introduced at the NAACP convention as “one of the four women that was told to go back home.”

The hometown crowd let out cheers.

“It’s beyond just the four of us,” Tlaib told ​t​he convention. “The Squad is all of you.”

“This is a new era of the civil rights movement. And until people like us in this room run for office and get on the inside and push back, we’re not going to win.”

Trump didn’t let ​up on his attacks.

On Monday, he tweeted the Squad is “a very Racist group of troublemakers who are young, inexperienced, and not very smart.”

Pelosi also spoke to the convention, but stayed away from Trump’s tweets.

Instead she spoke of civil rights leaders Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks and pointed to the historic diversity in the US House and the legislation its members have passed.

“Our members just don’t serve, they lead,” Pelosi said.