The offer hasn’t even been sent, but Kevin Durant is rejecting it anyway.

“Nah, I won’t do that,” Kevin Durant, the 2017 NBA Finals MVP, said about the possibility of visiting the White House. “I don’t respect who’s in office right now.”

Durant told ESPN on Thursday that he would stay away from President Donald Trump, skipping the traditional White House visit that so many championship teams have taken. The team is scheduled to visit Washington on Feb. 28 to take on the Wizards, and if the White House asks Golden State to stop by, Durant will be absent.

“I don’t agree with what [Trump] agrees with, so my voice is going to be heard by not doing that,” said Durant, a Maryland native. “That’s just me personally, but if I know my guys well enough, they’ll all agree with me.”

Durant is vocalizing his own decision, not the team’s. Following the Warriors ousting the Cavaliers in Game 5, the team said it would be an organizational decision whether to visit the White House, if invited. Stephen Curry and coach Steve Kerr, in particular, frequently have spoken out against the president.

Durant placed blame on Trump for the rising racial tension in the country, including the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., last weekend, in which a counter-protester was killed.

“[Trump is] definitely driving it,” Durant said. “I feel ever since he’s got into office, or since he ran for the presidency, our country has been so divided and it’s not a coincidence. When [Barack] Obama was in office, things were looking up. We had so much hope in our communities where I come from because we had a black president, and that was a first.”

The majority of the Warriors visited then-President Obama after winning the title in 2015, when Durant still was with Oklahoma City.